CSD-8: Sustainable Development Success Stories |
Location |
67 of the 75 districts in Nepal |
Responsible Organisation |
International Fund for Agricultural
Development (IFAD) |
Description |
Nepal is the tenth poorest country in the world. The project targeted 16,000 rural women living below the poverty line and facing strong social barriers such as gender bias, caste and ethnic divisions. Women also lacked access to the means by which they could improve their living standard. In the project design, the importance of rural women’s contribution to production and family income was recognized. The project was therefore designed in order to increase the income of poor rural women, thereby enhancing their status in society and improving the welfare of their families. Training and community development initiatives were undertaken in parallel with credit for income-generating activities. Training for adult literacy, social empowerment and mobilisation was provided to rural women. Activities were also undertaken that would save women work, such as schemes for drinking water, community forestry, etc. Social services and infrastructure were developed through this project, as well as infrastructure to support communications and dissemination (e.g. community halls). The project sought to involve the communities in the development process. The ultimate objective of the project was to ensure that women’s interests would be duly reflected in development policies in Nepal. This could be achieved through developing the capacity of the Women Development Division within the Ministry of Local Development. Women were integrated within the regular delivery system for credit and technical support services. Through the establishment of self-reliant women’s groups, rural women were able to initiate and undertake productive activities. Furthermore, micro community development projects were supported including: literacy classes, drinking water development, trail improvement, irrigation development, establishment of child-care centre, toilet construction and improved cooking stove installation. |
Issues Addressed |
Poverty, capacity building, economic growth, gender, finance, community development, sustainable agriculture. |
Results Achieved |
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Lessons Learned |
The evaluation of the project demonstrated that although initial transaction costs incurred were high, yet the efforts in outreach, empowerment, literacy and income generation were well-justified, given the context of stark gender inequality combined with poverty. The project successfully launched an institutional innovation and demonstrated that associations of resource-poor women can manage their credit needs without links to, or credit from, the formal banking sector with little default. |
Contacts |
Farhana Haque-Rahman |