Paper
Community Empowerment and Scaling-up in Urban Areas: The Evolution of Push/Prospect in Zambia
How can community-driven development initiatives increase their scope?
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79 pages
The paper examines the scaling-up experience of two projects - the "Peri-Urban Self-Help Project" (PUSH II) and the "Program of Support for Poverty Elimination and Community Transformation" (PROSPECT), looking especially at the mechanisms of community-driven development (CDD) and the area-based organizations (ABOs).
It provides the following details:
- PROSPECT aims to reduce poverty in the peri-urban areas of Lusaka;
- It employs a community-based approach to carry out the activities of:
- Social empowerment (institution-building at the local level),
- Personal empowerment (microfinance),
- Infrastructure improvement (mostly water-supply schemes).
- It supports ABOs that are part of the city government;
- Both projects develop CDD mechanisms and strengthen community capacities to respond to community needs.
The study finds that:
- PROSPECT has developed and changed over time;
- It has redirected and energized the ABOs and assisted their incorporation into the social and institutional fabric of municipal governance;
- It scales up processes as well as infrastructure;
- The ABOs consist of the zone development committees (ZDCs) and the residents' development committees (RDCs) who take responsibility for mobilizing residents and implementing projects.
The study concludes that:
- Successful scaling-up requires project staff and management to adapt their approaches to local conditions;
- It is important to scale-up processes, not simply replicate the mechanics;
- Staff must be well-trained;
- Scaling-up requires communities to be able to make demands, and authorities to be able to respond.
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