1,184 research outputs found

    Why Corporate Community Engagement Is Failing in Africa and What Civil Society Organizations Can Do to Change the Tide

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    Corporate community engagement is on the increase in Africa. Yet there is nothing much to show for this increased corporate benevolence except unfinished schools and hospitals, broken sewers and abandoned boreholes. This article offers reasons for this disconnect and how NGOs can take advantage of the heightened increase in Corporate Community engagement to not only refocus how companies make and spend their profits, but how they ( NGOs) can tap into the private sector for increased funding

    A Framework to Assess Returns on Investments in the Dryland Systems of Northern Kenya

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    Governments need quantitative assessments of the outcomes of proposed investments so they can weigh the merits of each option. Without these, there is a risk that some proposed changes could in fact reduce rather than increase benefits to the economy and society. At present, there is no definitive framework for assessing the returns to Northern Kenya's predominantly pastoralist land use, nor any prediction of its returns under anticipated climate changes. There is therefore no possibility of comparing returns between this and any alternatives. Flagship projects planned to accelerate economic development in Northern Kenya include an international transport corridor, a resort city and an international airport. In addition, mineral deposits are being discovered, towns are growing across both arid and semi-arid areas, and land speculation is increasing. The county governments are faced with the task of prioritising investments which can do the most to improve living standards for local people. This paper is intended to stimulate and contribute to a discussion of how the returns on land-based investments in the drylands should be evaluated. It presents an assessment framework for weighing the total economic value of the ecosystem services provided by pastoral and mixed land-use systems under anticipated climate changes and variability. The proposed framework draws on contributions from previous research at IIED and by other research partners focusing on ecosystem service assessment in Northern Kenya and surrounding dry regions. The paper reviews the current state of knowledge on the returns from pastoral and other land uses in the region, identifies research gaps and highlights the next steps needed for implementing the framework

    PMI Activity TZ-1,2: IRS and LLIN: Integration of Methods and Insecticide Mode of Actions for Control of African Malaria Vector Mosquitoes

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    Long lasting Insecticidal nets (LLINs) and indoor residual spraying (IRS) are the preferred techniques for malaria vector control in Africa, where their application has a proven contribution to the recent significant reductions in the burden of the disease. Even though both methods are commonly used together in the same households, evidence of improved malaria control due to the use of combinations as opposed to use of either method alone has been minimal and inconclusive.To measure the mode of action of three classes of insecticides used for IRS at the WHO recommended dose: the organochlorine DDT 70 wettable powder (AVIMA, South Africa) at 2g/m2; the pyrethroid lambda-cyhalothrin capsule suspension ICON CS, (Syngenta, Switzerland), at 0.03g/m2; and the organophosphate pirimiphos-methyl (PM) emulsified concentrate, also known as actellic (Syngenta, Switzerland), at 2g/m2 used alone or in combination with three leading LLIN brands: PermaNet 2.0¼ nets (Vastergaard, Switzerland), Olyset¼ nets (manufactured by A-Z, Tanzania), and Icon Life¼ nets (Bestnet Europe ltd, Denmark). All LLINS were used intact and were not subjected to repeated washing to reflect their optimum performance. The control was untreated polyester net. Data were collected from experimental huts developed during the project to measure both behavioral and toxic modes of actions of insecticides in Southern Tanzania. The primary malaria vector is Anopheles arabiensis with >90% susceptibility to insecticides of all classes at diagnostic doses in WHO susceptibility assays. Two rounds of data collection were performed: 1) 4 months during the dry season 2) six months during the wet season. Data generated from the experimental hut studies were analysed with Poisson-lognormal generalized linear mixed effects models (GLMM). Data was also simulated using deterministic mathematical model to measure potential impacts of each IRS, LLIN and combination thereof on malaria at a community level. Bite prevention (feeding inhibition): During both rounds, all the IRS treatments, LLINs and the controls (which consisted of intact untreated mosquito nets), provided greater than 99% protection from potentially infectious bites by the malaria vector, An. arabiensis, for the entire duration of the study. Most of the mosquitoes were caught inside the exit traps as opposed to inside the experimental huts, regardless of whether the huts were had LLINs, IRS or non-insecticidal nets. More than 95% of An. arabiensis, Culex pipiens quinquefasciatus and Mansonia africana / uniformis mosquitoes were caught inside the exit traps while exiting the huts. Toxicity: All IRS treatments, all the LLINs and the majority of LLIN/IRS combinations significantly increased proportions of dead An. arabiensis mosquitoes, relative to the control huts. The most toxic IRS relative to the controls was PM (RR = 2.21 (1.82 – 2.68), P < 0.001), followed by ICON CS (RR = 1.55 (1.27 – 1.89), P < 0.001) and then DDT (RR = 1.44 (1.18 – 1.77), P < 0.001). The most toxic LLIN relative to the controls was PermaNet 2.0¼ nets (RR = 1.65 (1.58 – 1.74), P < 0.001), followed by Icon Life¼ nets (RR = 1.55 (1.42 – 1.69), P < 0.001) and then Olyset¼ nets (RR = 1.33 (1.12 – 1.47), P < 0.001). Combinations of IRS and LLINs relative to LLINs alone: In most cases, there was no significant increase in An. arabiensis mortality in huts combining LLINs plus IRS, relative to huts having LLINs only, except in cases where the specific IRS treatment was PM. Addition of PM significantly increased proportional mortality of An. arabiensis when combined with Olyset¼ nets (RR = 1.38 (1.14 – 1.65), P = 0.001), PermaNet 2.0¼ nets (RR = 1.42 (1.18 – 1.71), P <0.001) and Icon Life¼ (RR = 1.24 (1.03 – 1.49), P = 0.023). Combinations of LLINs and DDT or lambda cyhalothrin resulted in marginal increases in An. arabiensis mortality relative to huts with LLINs alone although none of these combinations resulted in a statistically significant increase. Combinations of IRS and LLINs relative to IRS alone: There was a trend of significant increases in An. arabiensis mortality in huts having IRS plus LLINs, relative to huts having just the IRS alone, except for the combinations of 1) Olyset¼ with ICON CS, 2) DDT with Olyset¼ or 3) DDT with Icon Life¼ nets. In the huts that had been sprayed with PM, there was a significant increase in An. arabiensis mortality whenever Icon Life¼ nets (RR = 1.39 (1.18 – 1.63), P < 0.001), Olyset¼ nets (RR = 1.32 (1.13 – 1.55), P = 0.001) or PermaNet 2.0¼ nets (RR = 1.26 (1.08 – 1.48), P = 0.004) were added, relative to the huts where PM IRS was used alone. Similarly, in the huts that had been sprayed with ICON CS, there was a significant increase in An. arabiensis mortality in combination with Icon Life¼ nets (RR = 1.43 (1.19 – 1.73), P < 0.001) or PermaNet 2.0¼ nets (RR = 1.70 (1.35 – 2.13), P < 0.001), but not Olyset¼ nets (RR = 1.16 (0.92 – 1.45), P = 0.210), relative to the IRS alone. In huts sprayed with DDT, none of the LLINs significantly improved proportional mortality of the An. Arabiensis mosquitoes, except PermaNet 2.0¼ nets (RR = 1.18 (1.06 – 1.32), P = 0.003). Residual efficacy bioassays of IRS: All IRS formulations were highly effective during the first month after spraying and rapidly decayed losing most activity within 1-3 months. In month 1, all An. arabiensis exposed to palm ceilings sprayed with either PM or ICON CS died, and 85% were killed by DDT (despite full susceptibility most likely because it flaked away). On mud walls sprayed with the same chemicals, 100%, 90.0% and 97.5% mortality was observed, respectively, during the first month. Activity of the IRS declined significantly so that by the third month, PM on palm and mud killed 42.5% and 55.0% of exposed An. arabiensis, respectively. ICON CS killed only 46.3% on palm and 52.5% on mud walls. By month 6, PM had nearly entirely decayed, killing only 7.5% of An. arabiensis exposed to sprayed palm ceilings and 27.5% of those exposed to sprayed mud walls; ICON CS killed 30.0% on ceilings and 27.5% on walls. DDT had a longer residual action, killing 42.5% of An. arabiensis exposed to sprayed ceilings, and 36.3% of those exposed to sprayed walls after 6 months. Residual efficacy bioassays of LLINs: While all the LLINs generally performed better (i.e. killed more mosquitoes) on wire frame assays than on the cone assays, their activity rapidly deteriorated by the second month of use relative to new nets. Only PermaNet¼ nets retained mosquitocidal efficacy of >80% by the sixth month of net use (killing 92.7% on wire ball tests and 84% on cone assays). All the LLINs however retained very high knock-down rates (> 90% in wire ball tests and >80% in cone tests) on the exposed mosquitoes, except Olyset¼ nets whose knock-down activity reduced to 72.7% on wire ball tests and 62% on cone tests by the sixth month. Both the field studies and the model simulations showed that any synergies or redundancies resulting from LLIN/IRS combinations are primarily a function of modes of action of active ingredients used in the two interventions. None of the IRS or LLINs tested was deterrent so they do not protect by keeping mosquitoes from houses in this setting. Very few mosquitoes were able to obtain a blood meal due to the use of intact LLINs and untreated control nets. Therefore, where households are correctly using and maintaining LLINs there is no added value in the additional application of IRS unless the IRS chemical is highly toxic and non-irritant, as is PM. This compound consistently increased mosquito mortality in combination with any LLIN even though mosquitoes did not rest indoors as they were unable to obtain a blood meal. The average duration of effect of insecticides in this setting was 3 months, far lower than that stated by the manufacturers, so IRS should be carefully timed. Where IRS is the pre-existing intervention, providing households with additional LLINs confers additional protection. Therefore, IRS households should always be supplemented with nets, preferably LLINs, which not only protect house occupants against mosquito bites, but also kill additional mosquitoes. Finally, where resources are limited, priority should be given to providing everybody with LLINs and ensuring that these nets are consistently and appropriately used, rather than trying to implement both LLINs and IRS in the same community at the same time.\ud \u

    Non-tariff barriers in EAC customs union: implications for trade between Uganda and other EAC countries

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    A key objective for the adoption of East African Community (EAC) Customs Union was to enhance economic gains through elimination of tariffs and non-tariff barriers (NTBs) within the member states. This study has established that several NTBs continue to exist, and some have persisted. The NTBs that have persisted for more than three years include a long list of customs documentation requirements, cumbersome formalities, and limited testing and certification arrangements. Other NTBs that still exist include: un-standardized weighbridges; several road blocks; lack of recognition of individual country’s standards; and the existence of several un-harmonised standards. The simulation results of spatial equilibrium model of maize trade with and without NTBs show that at the EAC level there are positive production, trade and welfare implications attributable to elimination of NTBs in intra-regional maize trade. The gains are greatest in trade and production in Uganda compared to Kenya and Tanzania. To eliminate the existing NTBs and to reduce the possibility of new ones being created, first and foremost, the EAC countries need to design effective mechanisms for identifying and verifying information about NTBs and ensuring their elimination. This will require giving the EAC Secretariat the mandate to compel individual countries to eliminate any identified NTB and to ensure that no new ones are created. Second, policy and legislative decisions made by, for example, Council of Ministers should be communicated in time for effective implementation...Non-tariff barriers, East African Community, EPRC, Uganda, Agribusiness, Agricultural Finance, Community/Rural/Urban Development, Consumer/Household Economics, Financial Economics, Industrial Organization, Labor and Human Capital, Productivity Analysis, Public Economics,

    Local council's response to street homelessness in Welkom

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    Faculty of Arts School of Humanities 0400617v [email protected] Degree of master housingThe aim of the study was to investigate, how Welkom council is responding to street homelessness in Welkom. The democratic government adopted, the Reconstruction and Development Programme, as an integrated socio-economic policy framework, to mobilize national, and human resources, towards a sustainable housing for urban, and rural poor. However, despite, the government’s concerted commitment to providing massive housing for its citizens, the problem of homelessness, remains pervasive. Three themes, which emerged as critical during the study, are discussed in detail, namely, lack of housing policy, addressing specifically street homelessness; lack of financial and legal mandate, by the local council, to house street homelessness; and lack of research department, and human resources for effective conceptualization of the issue. It is argued that the department of research is critical in providing strategic research facilities, in areas of housing policy, and legislation frameworks. Equally critical, is the need for skilled human resources, necessary for strategic and holistic provision of efficient and effective services. The study suggests complete overhaul of the national housing policy making it holistically inclusive. Equally suggested, is capacity building necessary for sustainable, efficient, and effective housing delivery and eradication of homelessness

    Book Review: Choosing Peace: The Catholic Church Returns to Gospel Nonviolence

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    Choosing Peace is an edited collection of essays, reflections, and testimonies of participants at the Conference on Nonviolence and Just Peace: Contributing to the Catholic Understanding and Commitment to Nonviolence, held in Rome between April 11 and 13, 2016. The overarching theme of the book is nonviolence and just peace, their relationship to the gospel of nonviolence, and usefulness in the twenty-first century. A subtheme that refuses to go away, and the backdrop to the quest for nonviolence and just peace, is just war. These themes turn on four distinct but related views on war and peace historically associated with Christianity, and in this book, the Catholic Church, namely: Pacifism, Just War, Total War and World Community. While some of these approaches are not the central focus of this book, Choosing Peace is a rich and rewarding contribution to the current debate on just peace and just war. Over the years, the Catholic Church has emphasized pacifism while also defending just war under the rubrics of last resort, legitimate defense, and humanitarian intervention, among others. Choosing Peace perceives just war tradition as failing to orient itself convincingly in relation to underlying causes and conspicuous effects of war and other forms of violence across the globe. This has led a number of contributors to challenge the dominance of just war tradition: to raise doubts not simply about its response to these causes and effects, to questions about its legitimacy today, but more importantly, about the very logic of just war tradition. In recent years, these doubts have extended to the idea of discipleship itself in the 21st century. In general, Choosing Peace is not convinced any violent conflict today legitimizes just war, under whichever rubric. Consequently, the book has attempted to redirect the attention of the Catholic Church away from just war to pacifist ideals characteristic of the life and teaching of Jesus, hence a sustained attempt to reinvigorate discipleship in accordance with the gospel nonviolence. However, it remains utopic in this quest, as demands of discipleship such as turning the other cheek might be unrealistic in the contexts sustained terrorist activity, to say the least. Moreover, its claim to spiritual and moral basis further complicates things

    Lumumba\u27s Congo: Roots of Conflict

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    Socioeconomic determinants of primary school dropout: The logistic model analysis

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    This paper describes the socioeconomic determinants of primary school dropout in Uganda with the aid of a logistic model analysis using the 2004 National Service Delivery Survey data. The Objectives were to establish the; household socioeconomic factors that influence dropout of pupils given free education and any possible policy alternatives to curb dropout of pupils. Various logistic regressions of primary school dropout were estimated and these took the following dimensions; rural-urban, gender, and age-cohort. After model estimation, marginal effects for each of the models were obtained. The analysis of the various coefficients was done across all models. The results showed the insignificance of distance to school, gender of pupil, gender of household head and total average amount of school dues paid by students in influencing dropout of pupils thus showing the profound impact Universal Primary Education has had on both access to primary education and pupil dropout. Also the results vindicated the importance of parental education, household size and proportion of economically active household members in influencing the chances of pupil dropout. The study finally calls for government to; keep a keen eye on non-school fees payments by parents to schools as these have the potential to increase to unsustainable levels by most households especially in rural areas; roll-out adult education across the entire country; and expand free universal education to secondary and vocational levels as it would allow some of those who can not afford secondary education to continue with schooling. This has the effect of reducing the number of unproductive members in the household.School dropouts, Primary education, education, EPRC, Consumer/Household Economics, Institutional and Behavioral Economics, Labor and Human Capital, Livestock Production/Industries, Research Methods/ Statistical Methods, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,

    The Paradigm of Eave Tubes: Scaling up House Improvement and Optimizing Insecticide Delivery against Disease-Transmitting Mosquitoes.

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    Control of mosquito-borne diseases is greatly compromised by spread of insecticide resistance, high implementation costs and sub-optimal compliance among users. Improved housing has potential to reduce malaria transmission nearly as much as long-lasting insecticide-treated nets (LLINs), while also preventing other arthropod-borne diseases and improving overall well-being. Yet, it is hardly promoted as mainstream intervention, partly because of high costs, minimal communal benefits to people in non-improved houses, and low scalability. By exploiting biological observations of mosquito behaviours around dwellings, scientists have developed a new approach that integrates effective vector control into housing developments. The technique involves blocking eave spaces in local houses, leaving a few cylindrical holes into which plastic tubes with insecticide-laden electrostatic nettings are inserted. Where houses already have blocked eaves, these cylindrical holes are drilled and the tubes inserted. The eave tube technology, as it is called, is an innovative new approach for implementing housing improvements, by creating a new scalable product that can be integrated in houses during or after construction. It takes away insecticides from proximity of users, and instead puts them where mosquitoes are most likely to enter houses, thereby reducing insecticidal exposure among household occupants, while maximizing exposure of mosquitoes. This way, lower quantities of insecticides are used, better house ventilation achieved, intervention costs reduced, and mass communal benefits achieved even were vectors are resistant to similar insecticides when delivered conventionally. There are however still some critical pieces missing, notably epidemiological, social and economic evidence that the above assertions are true and sustainable. Besides, there also some technical limitations to be considered, namely: (1) need for extensive house modifications before eave tubes are inserted, (2) ineligibility of poorest and highest-risk households living in housing structures not amenable to eave tubes, and (3) poor synergies when eave tubes are combined with LLINs or IRS in same households. Overall, this paradigm significantly improves delivery of insecticides against disease-transmitting mosquitoes, and provides opportunities for scaling-up the long-neglected concept of house improvement as a malaria intervention
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