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Measuring Women’s Empowerment on the chars of north-west Bangladesh: Lessons Learnt and Results Welcome: Thank you to gender-working group for allowing.

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Presentation on theme: "Measuring Women’s Empowerment on the chars of north-west Bangladesh: Lessons Learnt and Results Welcome: Thank you to gender-working group for allowing."— Presentation transcript:

1 Measuring Women’s Empowerment on the chars of north-west Bangladesh: Lessons Learnt and Results
Welcome: Thank you to gender-working group for allowing us to come and present and UST for hosting Apologies for the absence of other CLP team members CLP coming to an end and after a decade of work we have a lot to share. We recently published a series of lessons learnt briefs which focused on a variety of thematic areas, one of which was women’s empowerment This gender working group is a key audience for disseminating lessons learnt Quick overview of structure of presentation

2 The Chars Livelihoods Programme
CLP phase 2 started in 2010, and operational activities wrapped up end of February Improve the livelihoods, incomes and food security of at least one million extremely poor and vulnerable women, children and men living on remote isolated riverine char islands of north-western Bangladesh.

3 Why the chars? High concentrations of extreme poverty
River sediment: low-lying; prone to erosion; flooding Hard-to-reach, especially in the dry season What is a char (how they are formed, wide ranging characteristics, vulnerabilities) Few jobs; agricultural day labour = low-pay, seasonal Few government or NGO services; Limited infrastructure Poor health, food security, nutrition, literacy

4 Who does CLP work with? The Extreme Poor
CLP worked with the adult female in the household and directly targeted over 78,000 extreme-poor households. However some of our interventions involve the wider community as well. CLP’s HH Selection Criteria No land or access to land Total HH assets worth <Tk5,000 (approx £43.50) No job / regular employment Not receiving cash or asset grants from another programme; irregular income Resident on char for at least 6m Willing & able to attend weekly meetings Over 97% had savings less than Tk500 (£4.35). Avg savings in was Tk. 82 96% with less than Tk5,000 (£43.50) in productive assets. Avg value of assets was Tk 1,532.

5 What does CLP do? Water, sanitation & hygiene activities
Formation of community-based organisations Flood protection & employment generation Market Development Asset transfer& stipends Livelihoods training & support Providing health & nutrition services CLP offered a comprehensive, 18 month support package to 6 separate cohorts since Short explanation of cohorts. 18 sub-projects in this core package- some of the main ones are highlighted on the slide Social Development One of the first activities to start up Formation of social development groups, weekly curriculum that ranges from managing household finances/loan management to disaster preparedness, WASH, dangers of dowry/child marriage etc. Also includes couples counselling with spouse for increased gender-sensitivity Supporting health and nutrition Train local women as health and nutrition workers (CSKs/CPKs) for the chars communities Because of lack of access to quality health care on the chars, CLP facilitated over 32,000 satellite clinics - benefitting wider community and this work will continue post-CLP because of the multiple partnerships we have established with private actors and BRAC. Asset Transfer, services & livelihoods training Women choose their own productive asset to invest in Asset amount given= Tk 17,500 (approx £152) 98% chose cattle Monthly stipend for asset maintenance and household expenses Livelihoods training on cattle-rearing, poultry-rearing, homestead gardening Train LSPs to provide vaccination services for cattle; AI technicians/voucher Flood Protection to increase household resilience, CLP raised 31,763 plinths for over 77,000 CLP and non-CLP households 62,978 workers employed through IEP during lean season Water, sanitation, hygiene Access to improved water source by building/improving existing tube-wells Access to sanitary latrine above flood level, on plinth, with privacy shelter and water deal Targeted wider community as well CBO To help facilitate CLPs work- VDCs to lead social development, VSLs to increase access to finance/safe savings, CBCs to aid market development Market Development Formation of milk and meat business groups for participants to share production knowledge increase access to market inputs by bringing in CID CBCs to link char farmers with other market actors like input providers and buyers Partnerships With private and government actors to continue the work CLP has been doing on the chars and ensure progress ensues Ie. health, education and microfinance Social Development


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