Wednesday, August 22, 2012

It Can be done but you have to do it first



Rahel Husein is an entrepreneur who engages in refinery of sunflower discards from local relatively advanced refineries. She and so are a significant number of other women entrepreneurs in Singida, refines a dense oil paste leftover (ugido in Kiswahili) from local refineries. The local refineries can not fully refine all of the sunflower seeds to produce clear oil. Therefore a sunflower case and the oil paste are meant to be discards from the process. While the sunflower case is being sold to livestock keepers, the dense oil paste is sold to local women for furher processing. And then the women refine the paste to produce a clear sunflower cooking oil ready for sale. Typically the process involves mixing of 40 liters of the oil paste with 140 liters of water. The mixture is then skillfully boiled with constant stirring for four to five hours. The mixture is then skillfully filtered to produce clear oil sunflower. The final result is 20 liters of refined sunflower cooking oil. The process is a signature achievement that has been developed for several decades; not everyone can successfully produce clear sunflower oil. This is indeed, locally discovered way of refining sunflower leftovers that would otherwise be lost.

Ms. Rahel is 34 years old and she has five children. Two of her children attend primary school education; the remaining three are under the school age. Ms. Rahel has been a member of JUWAKI since year 2003; JUWAKI is a local women’s grassroots entrepreneurial civil society that has partnered with AGEN and AGEN-USA Inc. in the AEIF project since year 2011. Before she joined JUWAKI, Rahel didn’t own any business. Sadly, she handled all of her first loan to her husband believing that she couldn’t engage in any business. However, following continuous interaction with other JUWAKI entrepreneurs and frequent visits from AGEN and AGEN-USA Inc. volunteers, Rahel took a loan and successfully engaged in ugido refinery to produce sunflower oil for sale. She used her loan worthy Tanzanian shillings 100,000 to buy 5 buckets (each 20 liters) of ugido and produced 50 liters of processed sunflower oil (two buckets and a half). She earned a net profit of Tanzanian shillings 30,000 from the first production and a sum of Tanzanian shillings 120,000 only within the first moth of production. She then repaid her loan as she continued to expand her small business. The income earned from the business has been used to meet all necessary expenses of a relatively large household of 7; equally importantly, the income earned has enabled Rahel to meet all school expenses of her children attending school.

After successfully repayment of the first loan, Rahel qualified for a loan which is double the amount she received earlier i.e. Tanzanian shillings 200,000. With that amount, Rahel can buy 10 to 15 (20 liters) buckets of Ugido weekly for refinery. That is to say that Rahel currently makes a profit three times of the original profit i.e. Tanzanian shillings 360,000. Like any other entrepreneur, Rahel has started to diversify her business and engage in poultry of local breeds of chicken. The free range local breeds can easily survive at the locality, are capable of laying eggs, produce chicks and raise them with minimal supervision from the owners. Besides, these are double or triple the price of exotic breeds such as broilers. However, Rahel has used the income earned to build a structure for a better and safer poultry business.

Rahel see more opportunities in her business because she, like many other small entrepreneurs, has not fully address the demand of the local market. A room for business expansion largely remains.

Rahel greatly thanks AGEN, AGEN-USA Inc. and the American people for a support that has truly transformed her life.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Angelina with her tailoring business


Angelina Mking’I is a local tailor living in Iringa municipality. She has three children all of whom are girls. Here are their names: Loveness Kulanga who is 15 years old and in third year (Form three) of ordinary level secondary education; Verynice Kulanga is12 years old and is in sixth year of primary education; and finally, Angelfes (Angel’s face) Kulanga who is 9 years old and currently in standard 3 at one of the local primary schools in Iringa. Angelina’s husband engages in small business and in particular he buys and sells rice. Angelina enjoys freedom, love and support from her husband. In particular, the husband allows her ample time to own, use the earning and run her business as she wishes.

Angelina is one of nearly 400 AEIF beneficiaries of a project run by AGEN and AGEN-USA Inc. alumni and their colleagues in Tanzania and from across the globe. Specifically, Angelina was provided with as a loan worthy Tanzanian shillings 72,000 to help her expand her tailoring business. 

Prior to accessing the loan, Angelina had a small capital of only Tanzanian shillings 17,500. With that amount she could only buy less fabric at an elevated rate and as a result she could only earn Tanzanian shillings 62, 500. The fabric could only last for a week. Consequently, a significant portion of the earning was lost through expenses associated with weekly purchases of fabric and associated transportation. Instead, of engaging in business, she lost her precious time resource through weekly purchases.

However, the loan has enabled her to earn and save more money; she currently earns, Tanzanian shillings 250,000 within three weeks. A significant amount of that income isn’t lost because she has enough fabric to last for the whole month. She also has more time to engage in her business. And she purchases more fabric at a discounted rate.

Angelina conveys her greatest gratitude to the Tanzanian alumni, AGEN, AGEN-USA Inc. and in particular the American people for their support that has truly transformed her life for better.

Monday, August 20, 2012

Please take a look at another article by Rasel Madaha in a reputable Peer Reviewed journal


Title:Disparate Coping Strategies for Gendered effects of Drought: a Call for Re-examination of Gender Roles and Harmful Traditions in Central Tanzania
Author(s):Rasel Mpuya Madaha, (University at Buffalo)
Citation:Rasel Mpuya Madaha, (2012) "Disparate Coping Strategies for Gendered effects of Drought: a Call for Re-examination of Gender Roles and Harmful Traditions in Central Tanzania", International Journal of Disaster Resilience in the Built Environment, Vol. 3 Iss: 3
Article type:Research paper
Publisher:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Abstract:Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to facilitate an understanding of influence of gender roles in drought so as to come with relevant recommendation aimed at bettering the lives of men, women and girl children.
Design/methodology/approach - Data have been collected via participant observation, interviews and collection of unpublished primary and secondary data generated by case studies conducted by the author. After which, content analysis was employed for its potentiality as a means of systematically identifying, classifying and analyzing information relevant to this study. Please refer to the attached manuscript for details.
Findings - It is argued in this study that the survival of the community, in Central Tanzania, is questionable because effects of drought have reached intolerable levels and strategies adopted aren’t that helpful. More specifically, socially assigned gender roles, position women and girl children at the most disadvantageous position as the main victims of the disaster. Accordingly, gender roles have to be changed, if the effects of drought have to be mitigated and the community rescued from disappearance.
Research limitations/implications - It would have been impossible to conduct such a large scale research, if I were not employed by organizations working in the study areas. Moreover, accessibility of such information would have been impossible by a regular researcher. Funding agencies are not interested in research which involve long time observations.
Practical implications - It would have been useful if deeper water-bores are constructed so as to ensure long term supply of water. Moreover, rain fed agriculture is no longer reliable. For that reason irrigation should be promoted by construction of structures to facilitate trapping of rain water. In other words, water from rain can be trapped and be used for irrigation. Usually the region is flooded during rain season and that is an indication that rain water can be harvested.
Originality/value - The research is original as data obtained cannot be easily accessed by short term researchers who have inadequate knowledge of the community and cannot observe season changes. Practitioner, social scientists and natural scientists, engineers and contractors included, can have their confidence in the findings: the findings are ready to be used.

For more details please visit http://www.emeraldinsight.com/journals.htm?issn=1759-5908&volume=3&issue=3&articleid=17045715&show=pdf&PHPSESSID=s3gaeoh1hgvvasqshaq9mjua01or click here

The Grassroots Investment Model for Global Development


Figure 1: The Grassroots Investment Model

The views suggested in this model do not necessarily reflect the views of AGEN and AGEN-USA Inc; these views are mainly from Rasel Madaha who together with James Jesse has won an award as Champions of Women's Economic Empowerment offered by TIAW(TIAW World of Difference 100 Award and its TIAW Annual Global Partnership Forum recognizes up to 100 extraordinary women and men from around the world each year whose efforts have advanced the economic empowerment of women locally, regionally or worldwide, including well-known women and men as well as “unsung heroes.” The motto of TIAW is “Connecting to Make All the Difference in the World.” Details can be found at http://www.tiaw.org/global_forum_2012/Home_Page.asp) following their participation in the project titled,Women Empowerment in Rural Sub Sahara Africa through Capacity Building and Training in Tanzania. Using his experience drawn from the mentioned project and his prior experience spanning for a period of over five years, Rasel has developed the model for wider distribution and applicability across the globe and in Sub-Saharan Africa in particular. This is the first step towards production of a resourceful book on the same. By and large, the major argument made here is that development agencies need to trust poor/grassroots people because they are capable of helping themselves. The dominant doctrine that people need to be provided with direct assistance such as food, medicine, buildings and free education is being challenged. It is argued that any development intervention should invest in grassroots people’s resources by providing grassroots people with opportunities, mainly through micro-credit or other forms of grassroots level investment, for them to manage their development as they wish and as per their context specific situation. It should be underscored that grassroots people, especially those in developing countries are not that much poor and idle waiting for external assistance; actually they are busy engaging in various activities including income generating activities to make ends meet.  Although majority of them live in muddy houses, grassroots people in developing countries and Sub-Saharan Africa in particular, unlike poor people in developed countries, own a piece of land in which their respective muddy houses have been build. Majority of them equally own relatively larger piece of land, close or far from their respective houses, for subsistence farming. Such small farms, for example, are the ones which produce food for wider public consumptions in many of the Sub-Saharan African countries. The grassroots people are largely on their own as their respective governments invest in large micro-economic projects which benefit a small proportion of the population in those countries. The difference between grassroots people in developed and developing world is that those in developed world own their labor not portions of land, they are fewer and therefore receive support from their respective governments; those in developing world own land, their labor, they are the majority and thus receive limited assistance from their equally poor governments. 

Noteworthy, the assistance that impoverished grassroots people receive from both government and other development agencies, cannot enable them to meet their subsistence needs for the whole year. However, they survive throughout the year as they use whatever recourses they have in their localities. These are what are referred to as, “hidden resources” and it is time that the world should invest in such resources. Using such hidden resources, unrecognized by many in the outside world including those living in urban places of the supposedly poverty stricken countries, rural grassroots people can buy and produce food for themselves, send their children to school, build or improve their houses, strengthen their businesses, and even build schools for their children with no or zero support from government and other agencies.
The critical question that we need to ask ourselves is, “we have been providing poor people with insufficient free services for decades and in particular since independence in 1960s. Yet the proportion of Sub-Saharan poor people has remained relatively the same i.e. over 70% in many countries.” We need to re-examine our current models and attempt innovative models. It is time that we should invest on grassroots people and stimulate the engine in them to farther their context specific development.
Specifically, the Grassroots Investment Model (see the figure), as it is proposed by Mr. Rasel Madaha following his observations and direct interaction with grassroots entrepreneurs before AEIF project (Rasel had been interacting with the grassroots entrepreneurs for over  five years providing them with training and funds through organizations that he worked for) and during implementation of AEIF titled the “Women Empowerment in Rural Sub Sahara Africa through Capacity Building and Training in Tanzania” calls for greater interaction and partnership among grassroots people, scholars, government, and not-for-profit NGOs to identify and help develop grassroots people’s capabilities to help themselves and to pave way for them to contribute to the large human development.
Rasel argues that development agencies should understand that grassroots people in rural areas of Sub-Saharan Africa engage in some businesses even before their arrival and they can soundly decide what is important for them. Specifically, the major role of development agencies should be to identify existing groups of entrepreneurs not form new ones. Such kind of social setting already exists and in particular among women. The next step should be to identify if such groups have developed into networks. If the a network exists, the development agencies should start right away to interact with the network through formal arrangements such as signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU). The MoU should be longer than proposed end of project to the donor. For example, AGEN has signed an MoU that is going to last four years after donor’s support has ended.
In absence of a network, agencies should work with local NGOs only for a short time to network existing groups to help them form an autonomous network that should be legally registered. Then other formal arrangement of collaboration, such as signing of an MoU, should follow. Then, an agency should spend a significant amount of time and other resources to build the capacity of the network through mutual collaboration. During, this time the agency should understand that a grassroots network is a master of its environment and should equally learn from the network in efforts to build its capacity to serve the community better. Such relationship of mutual responsibility should remain throughout implementation of the project in such a way that more responsibilities to manage the project are being passed to the network right from the start as opposed to being retained by the NGOs. 

NGO administrative expenses are usually high and it has become a common thing for majority of donors to demand that such NGOs should minimize their administrative expenses and invest a larger proportion of funds on project. To minimize NGO administrative expenses and invest more on grassroots intervention, governments, development agencies and/or NGOs should make use of local volunteers and part-time employees. There are a lot of individuals outside there in search of job experience and these can be of great help for NGOs. However, in order retain volunteers for a longer time there should be arrangements for meals, accommodation, transportation and other forms of assistance. Good sources of such volunteers are, among other things, leaders of local grassroots groups at project sites, employees of grassroots NGOs working in the area, students, recent graduates and junior university faculty. International volunteers can equally play a key role through social media tools such as facebook, blogs and the like. They, among other things, can help in fundraising. One should not underestimate the power of social media which increasingly connect the world into one global village. AGEN and AGEN-USA Inc. whose members are scattered from across the globe have been benefited much from use of free and cheap social media tools. Well qualified and experienced full time employees are important; nevertheless, the number of such employees should be kept to a minimum and preferably from the country where an intervention takes place. International employees who consume large portion of funds in terms of salaries and other forms of stipends should equally work on part-time basis preferably residing in their countries. They can conduct occasional visits to project sites and use social media tools to monitor progress with those residing in project sites.

At country’s level, there should be similar arrangements. For example, national NGO staff should only conduct occasion visits (AGEN did it on monthly basis) to the site and continuously gather reports prepared by grassroots network leaders (who will be monitoring progress on daily basis) on monthly basis. Such arrangements would enable the NGO at national and international level to cheaply monitor the project for relatively longer time after donor’s support has ended (what the NGO can do once donor’s support has ended should be part of the equation and all donors should demand for a clear plan. AGEN and AGEN-USA Inc. has planned to and will implement the project four years after donor’s support has ended). The end of the project as proposed by or to the donor should not be the actual end of the project. Equally apparently, local government authorities should also be involved from the start in such a way that local government authorities treat local network as partners and not subjects or subordinates. Local government authorities interact with grassroots people on day to day basis. Therefore, a significant amount of investment should be dedicated towards this area to equip leadership of networks with skills and knowledge that will enable them to best make use of free government services. As the networks grow, they should be ready to pay for some services and not merely rely on free government services. For example, they should be able to provide underpaid local government experts with some stipend to make them come to their villages and provide some training to their group members. Moreover, they should equally sponsor visits of some government officials because such officials are likely to play an important role in addressing future conflicts especially when the role of an external local or international NGO has been minimized. 

Finally closing of one project should not be the end of everything. Using lessons learned from previous interventions, external NGOs should then launch a similar intervention elsewhere. Efforts to link individuals residing at new project sites and those from previous project sites should then be made. It has taken AGEN and AGEN-USA Inc. to build powerful communities at grassroots level for only a year. Another year of minimum intervention might be required. The bottom line is we do not need NGOs to stay at project site for years because in doing so, they replace and even duplicate government services as they severely cripple grassroots groups and networks from becoming full independent and functional. NGOs shouldn’t stay in one project site, they should be constantly moving to newer sites to learn newer ways and then share from their previous experiences. Thus the big role of NGOs should be networking locally owned networks from across a country for them to become key stakeholders in the development of their own country. If that level is attained in a country, then NGOs and international ones in particular, as we know them today, are no longer needed. Instead, intergovernmental institutions such as the UN and East African community should replace international NGOs at international level. At grassroots or country’s level, locally owned civil societies should replace NGOs. NGOs can neither speak for the government nor speak for the international community; let aim at building ways that give true voice to grassroots people themselves. And the cycle aimed at fostering larger economic development, both micro and macro, for sustainable human development of a country and the whole world continues.