Women in India Protect Land & Foster Self-Reliance
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Summary
Promote traditional farming methods to create tangible and positive changes in the natural environment. Create economic livelihood opportunities to improve lives of poor women in Bihar, India.
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How Donors Like You Helped
Thanks to donors like you, a total of $14,190 was raised for this project.
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Received $14,190 from 58 donations from people like:
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More Information About this Project
Project Needs and Beneficiaries
Greater use of chemical fertilizers, pesticides and high-yielding variety seeds have led to degradation of soil and increases in the cost of farming. In Bihar, lack of opportunities at home forces men to migrate to cities for jobs, leaving their wives and children behind. Women are left to care for the family with very little income. The project will work with 300 women from poor families to adopt alternative farming methods and identify opportunities to improve their livelihoods.
Activities
Organize 300 women into self-help groups to provide them a support platform; help them save, take credit for income-generation activities and build linkages with banks. Train women on sustainable agriculture and new livelihood opportunities.
Funding Information
Total Funding Received to Date: $14,190
Funding Information
This project is now in implementation and no longer available for funding.
Received funds will be used to accomplish concrete objectives as
indicated in the project's "Activities" section. Updates will be posted under the
"Progress Report" tab as they become available.
Donors' contributions and pledges to this project totaled $14,190. The original project funding goal was $14,190.
Additional Documentation
This project has provided additional documentation in a Microsoft Word file (projdoc.doc).
Resources
Why this Project is Important
Potential Long Term Impact
An improved quality of life of 300 women and their families living under marginalized circumstances in Bihar. The self-help groups provide a platform for women to be self-reliant and engage in sustainable income-generation activities.
Project Message
The vegetable seeds market is dominated by genetically modified seeds that cannot be recycled and are tasteless. Traditional seeds let me set aside whatever I want, whenever I can. My costs are lower.
- Pramila Devi, active member and advocate of traditional seeds
When this Project was Updated
Last Updated
This project was last updated on November 27, 2007.
Date Added to GlobalGiving
This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on September 02, 2005.
Latest Update from the Field
Final Update
By Katherine Zavala - Coordinator of Programs, November 27, 2007 06:02 PM
Thank you all so much for support!
In total, 1,500 women in Bihar, India, benefited from your generous donations by having increased food security that was initiated by the development activities highlighted in this project.
Comments from Annu, Secretary (Executive Director) of Manavi: There is a strong demand for education and health mainly for girl children and adult women. Most of the target community, women and children, are illiterate. As SHG members, [need] to read and write, and calculate money and interest, women are now more eager than before to educate their children, especially their own daughters. Child marriages are a prevailing issue in theses villages. Now these practices are decreasing. Now women are willing to give proper mental and physical care to their children.
Self-Help Groups and Income Generation: providing women with access to microcredit, help women connect with banks and teach the women financial and management skills. 500 women from five villages participated in savings and credit groups; each woman now saves around $1 per month. Regular trainings take place on basic math, bookkeeping, and repayment plans. Self Help Groups have leveraged over $4,000 in loans from formal banking institutions in Bihar for dairying and other small businesses. 340 women participated in income-generating activities gaining an economic foothold to continue growing their income.
The majority of participants were engaged in dairying and fishing. o 10 women received honey cultivation training with an estimated $60-$80/year added income o 50 families received goats to rear, sell and earn an income o 50 women gained access to and registered for public resources such as pensions, accidental death claims, first child support, and savings incentive programs. o 7 women were able to greatly expand the size of their bangle-making businesses.
Food Security and Sustainable Agriculture: through vegetable gardens, livestock, horticulture, crop diversification and related income-generation activities. 100 people participated in and now have access to seed banks in 5 villages. 350 women participated in sustainable, organic farming training focusing on the use of natural pest and fertilizing systems.
Other notable trainings included the following: o 40 vermicompost pits (raising and production of earthworms and their byproducts for waste reduction and fertilizing production) were dug in 5 villages. o 50 farmers visited agricultural research institutions to learn about the benefits of organic farming o 6 women participated in intensive train-the-trainers sessions on food processing; they in turn will train approximately 120 women in the same.
Other Activities and Outcomes 6-7 health camps per month serving an average of 150 women per camp for pregnant women and women ages 0-5 were provided preventative care and consultation. Manavi organized more than 20 village-level meetings where agriculture scientists were invited to share best practices on documentation of sustainable farming practices. Participants of Manavis village-level meetings included self-help group leaders, members of farmers clubs and office bearers of Jaiv Panchayats (Living Democracy), a movement initiated by the Research Foundation of Science, Technology and Ecology (RFSTE) that aims to establish a definitive sovereignty of local communities on biodiversity resources. In 11 villages Manavi has facilitated the formation of Jaiv Panchayats to bring local farmers together to bring forth issues related to food insecurity and the effects of conventional farming vs. organic farming, among others.
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