Partnerships for Sustainable Development - CSD Partnerships Database   |  
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  • The DURAS Project: Promoting Sustainable Development in Southern Agricultural Research Systems
  • Geographical Scope: Global
    Lead Partner: Government of France - Agropolis - Global Forum on Agricultural Research (GFAR)
    Summary:
    The Southern National Agricultural Research Systems (SNRAs) have recently gained a forum in which to discuss and express their needs at world level. Within the Global Forum on Agricultural Research (GFAR), they can meet their Northern partners as well as representatives of international centres. Together, they have determined that issues addressing biodiversity, ecosystem management and sustainable development (SD) must now be included in their mission.
    GFAR is designed to encourage an upward structure of research systems: national, sub-regional, regional and global. These various levels also offer a place for stakeholders within societies affected by development research. This allows them to become involved in the various stages of formulating and monitoring research programmes.
    The project aims to strengthen the abilities of GFAR's Southern members to implement and manage the SD research programmes they believe to be strategically important for their regions. [more]
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  • The Electricity Governance Initiative
  • Geographical Scope: Global
    Lead Partner: National Institute of Public Finance and Policy - Prayas Energy Group - World Resources Institute
    Summary:
    The Electricity Governance Initiative seeks to enhance global understanding of electricity sector governance, and build the capacity of governments and civil society to implement good governance. The electricity sector globally has undergone fundamental transformations over the past decade. With new forms of organization, ownership, and technologies have come new and complicated questions about how decisions in the electricity sector are made and who makes them. Electricity reform has raised questions of governance that are increasingly recognized as important, but seldom answered. The Initiative is a partnership of civil society and electricity sector actors, whose goal is to create space for voices representing social and environmental considerations to be included in electricity sector decision-making, and advance implementation of Agenda 21. We seek to develop a common language for understanding governance and to build the capacity of civil society and governments to practice good governance. The partnership complements the efforts of civil society, governments, and private sector actors to advance public interests in the electricity sector. [more]
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  • The Global Rain Water Harvesting Collective
  • Geographical Scope: National
    Lead Partner: The Barefoot College
    Summary:
    The Global Rain Harvesting Collective (GRWHC) has been established is to provide drinking water to schools facing an acute shortage all over the world, through roof top rain water harvesting in schools.
    Rural communities all over the world have been collecting rainwater where it falls from time immemorial. In their fields, in open tanks and in traditional open wells. It was a technology that was accepted and applied on a large scale in the deserts, tribal regions and in the mountains.
    This age old method is suggested as an alternative to the wasteful and costly use of hand pumps and piped water supply systems. Rural communities have the technical competence to collect rainwater where it falls. It also wants to provide this facility to community service centers.
    The aim is to deliver tangible and sustainable results through a large number of small projects in many different countries at minimal operational and management cost. The `Demonstration Effect¿ of these projects may induce other stakeholders to replicate the process.
    Collecting rain water in public places also has considerable social benefits. It provides water to poor children who otherwise have to walk for miles to fetch water.
    Collected water is managed by local community hence they are less dependent on outside source.
    Schools become more attractive because of the availability of drinking water. Mothers are prepared to send their children to school for sweet drinking water in non potable areas where water is brackish
    It makes it more attractive for women to attend meetings at village centers such as about child care, health, education, literacy, and income generation activities.
    Linking clean rooftop water to sanitation has reduced the incidence of water borne diseases. With the water comes sanitation(hand flushed latrines).
    Education, poverty alleviation, gender equity objectives, implementation of environmental plans and community development programs can be achieved through rain water harvesting.
    Likewise, low technology approaches such as water recharge through slowing down of run-off and also diverting surface run-off water into unused and abandoned open wells in villages, and installing large rainwater storage tanks carved into hillside, in fact a variation on terracing, provides similar benefits.
    The Global Rainwater Harvesting Collective Programme[GRWHC] has two objectives
    a)To collect rainwater from roof tops in community places like schools, dispensaries, family planning clinics, training centers, and women¿s hostels in desert and mountain rural and semi-urban areas:
    b) To collect as much surface water in unused open wells in villages as possible so that the dry hand pumps in the thousands could be revitalized and these assets can be productive again.
    The Basic Aim is to campaign for roof top rain water harvesting in schools as a Global Movement. [more]
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  • The GlobalGiving Alliance
  • Geographical Scope: Global
    Lead Partner: GlobalGiving
    Summary:
    Members collaborate to create and support real solutions to economic problems, while developing new products and markets for their own businesses. [more]
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  • The Intersect HIV/Violence Against Women & Children Project
  • Geographical Scope: Global
    Lead Partner: INTERSECT
    Summary:
    At no time in history has the threat to our human and natural resources been so acute. Also, at no other time has there been such a high level of the awareness, capacity, connectivity and commitment required to shift the social environment to one in which sustainability is possible. INTERSECT sees that as the co-epidemics of HIV and Violence Against Women & Girls rage rampantly out of control across the global landscape, not only are women at critical risk and girls, even baby girls, left to face unimaginable dangers, the impact on all aspects of society and the sustainability of the earth are under threat from these, and a vast array of inseparably related issues. Clearly, innovative, far-reaching and never-before-tried collaborative approaches on a massive scale are called for.

    INTERSECT envisions and will provide the catalyst for the creation of Intersect Coalitions across nations worldwide to confront the results of HIV, Violence Against Women and Girls and the blowback into other movements caused in their wake. These multi-disciplined, diverse, broad-based Coalitions will inspire and work towards sweeping changes brought about through a shift in our approach to collaboration. The time has come to harness the existing creative energy of all related movements, coalitions, networks, appropriate governmental and intergovernmental institutions, major groups, NGO's, CBO's, grassroots organisations and individuals on an on-going basis, so that commonalities and intersecting points of vision and concern lead the way while bridging existing divides.
    INTERSECT will:
    * Bring together the Coalitions Networks, NGOs, CBOs, and individuals working in HIV, Violence Against Women and Girls, and all related fields.
    * Facilitate Coalition Building Sessions at which Coalition members will make agreements, set aside differences, plan strategies and outreach, and begin to determine their course.
    * Help to translate the outcomes of these dialogues into action
    * Connect Intersect Coalitions within a given country so that they can act nationally as well as locally, with great strength, visibility and unity. [more]
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  • The Mekong: A Living Classroom
  • Geographical Scope: Sub-regional Greater Mekong region
    Lead Partner: EON Foundation
    Summary:
    Project Goal: Globally communicative high school students able to take individual and cooperative actions for an economically prosperous and environmentally sound future for all societies in and around the Mekong River.

    Project Objectives:
    1) train teachers at local, and regional levels
    2) develop ongoing student English for Sustainability projects in Thailand, Laos,
    Cambodia, China and Vietnam
    3) link projects through student generated website
    4) empower students to develop their local communities through responsible individual and
    cooperative actions
    5) document projects for schools in other areas to adapt to local needs

    Project Educational Themes:
    1) poverty reduction through employable skills (English Language / computer literacy)
    2) environmental protection through adoption of sustainable business practices
    3) capacity building through delivery of English for Sustainability curriculum, pedagogy
    and innovative technological transfer

    [more]
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  • The SEED Initiative: Supporting Entrepreneurs for Sustainable Development
  • Geographical Scope: Global
    Lead Partner:
    Summary:
    The SEED Initiative inspires, supports and researches exceptional, entrepreneurial, nascent, multi-stakeholder partnerships for locally-led sustainable development in order to contribute to the delivery of the Millennium Development Goals and the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation.

    The initiative focuses on 'business as unusual' - innovative action delivering real solutions through project cooperation among small and large businesses, local and international NGOs, women's groups, labour organisations, public authorities and UN agencies, and others working in the field of sustainable development.
    Through an international award scheme, intensive capacity-building activities and a research programme, the SEED Initiative endeavors to stimulate and build the capacity of outstanding start-up enterprises executing action on the ground; create a conduit for investment in partnerships; disseminate good practice and lessons-learned from successful partnerships to inspire further new partnerships; and generate evidence-based research to assist policy makers.

    The SEED Initiative aims to:
    • support outstanding and innovative start-up entrepreneurs working in partnership in developing countries to improve livelihoods and manage natural resources sustainably
    • develop practical tools to help social and environmental entrepreneurs to scale up
    • influence policy-makers to create enabling environments for sustainable development businesses
    • inspire new entrepreneurial ventures to deliver social and environmental benefits.

    [more]
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  • Total Water Programme
  • Geographical Scope: Sub-regional Southern Africa
    Lead Partner: The GAIA-Movement Trust Living Earth Green World Action (The GAIA-Movement)
    Summary:
    The overall goal of the Total Water Programme (TWP) is to improve the livelihood of people by mobilising the communities to greater care of and better use of water and the natural resources influencing the water cycle.
    The two year TWP mobilises communities for activities that improve conditions for both people and environment in the project area:
    - The land degradation component assists the local communities in reducing land degradation and enables them to safeguard the local resources for sustainable use ¿ also for future generations
    - The deforestation component will benefit the ones, mostly women and girls, who collect firewood for household energy. In the long run this also improves local water balances.
    - The restoration component starts restoration of selected degraded nature areas, thus reducing erosion and siltation of rivers, increasing the recharge of groundwater so less wells run dry.
    - The safe water component reduces the workload of fetching water and reduces water related diseases
    - The sanitation component reduces the number of diseases and child mortality. Furthermore the compost produced by the ecolatrines improve tree and food production.
    - The component of water efficient farming improves food security and reduces the loss of valuable nutrients. [more]
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  • Tourism Satellite Account system for African countries
  • Geographical Scope: Regional - Africa
    Lead Partner: Government of South Africa - Department of Environment and Tourism (DEAT) - Government of South Africa - Statistics South Africa (StatSA)
    Summary:
    The Tourism Satellite Account (TSA) system, which is a statistical tool that measures the total economic impact of tourism, was developed by the World Tourism Organization (WTO) in 1995 with the objective of defining a new statistical instrument to assist government officials, business executives and stakeholders within the tourism industry to make informed decision.

    The benefits of a Tourism Satellite Account (TSA) are numerous and enable a country to measure the following:
     The proportion of a country's GDP i.e. the total output of all goods and services the country produces annually that are attributable to tourism activity
     The size of the tourism industry relative to other sectors of a country's economy
     The number of jobs generated by tourism activity
     The value of public and private investment related to tourism
     The effect of international tourism on a country's balance of payments
     The value of government income generated by tourism in the country
    The importance of a TSA for African countries is that it will provide the vital information required to assist African countries in policy formulation, decision-making and strategic planning to boost tourism growth on the continent. The information produced from a TSA would also ensure that tourism development on the continent takes place in a sustainable manner.

    This initiative will result in:
    * Financial investment in establishing appropriate infrastructure for the collection of tourism statistics.
    * The knowledge base of officials in African countries would be greatly enhanced in as far as the application of TSA is concerned.
    * The measurement of the economic impact of tourism through the provision of accurate information of African countries
    * Development of policies and strategies in African countries to boost tourism growth will be informed by accurate information. [more]
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  • Transfer of know-how held by Japanese local governments in the field of addressing environmental problems.
  • Geographical Scope: Regional
    Lead Partner: Government of Japan - Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    Summary:
    At WSSD, Japanese Government launched this partnership to contribute to sustainable development by further encouraging the sharing the know-how of Japanese local governments on environmental problems with local authorities in developing countries. This partnership also intended to promote the Kita-Kyushu Initiative adopted at the 4th Ministerial Meeting on Environment and Development held in Kita-Kyushu City in September 2000.
    On March 23, 2003, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan announced the "Initiative for Japan's ODA on Water" at the 3rd World Water Forum. In collaboration with the central government, Japanese public waterworks (operated by local governments) have played a significant role in assisting the ownership and capacity-building for planning, management, and control in the fields of water supply and sewage, as well as developing a network among Asian cities. [more]
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