{"id":1347,"date":"2018-10-31T15:46:05","date_gmt":"2018-10-31T14:46:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/didouqen.com\/?p=1347"},"modified":"2021-02-16T14:52:19","modified_gmt":"2021-02-16T14:52:19","slug":"eco-and-community-friendly-development-in-cameroon","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wordpress-haf.ddev.site\/eco-and-community-friendly-development-in-cameroon\/","title":{"rendered":"Eco- and Community-Friendly Development in Cameroon"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Ida Sophie Winter, HAF project manager
\nDecember 9, 2015<\/p>\n


\n

The High Atlas Foundation trains government and civil sector employees in participatory development<\/h2>\n

The High Atlas Foundation, in partnership with the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, Republic of Cameroon and United Nations Development Programme, trained Cameroonian government and civil sector employees in facilitating participatory community development in water management. The conference, held in Yaound\u00e9 November 24-25, aimed to train facilitators in participatory planning methods, allowing them to identify and implement water management systems and other sustainable projects with communities, as well as apply participatory approaches to water management and development in their professional lives.<\/p>\n

The conference was facilitated by Dr. Yossef Ben-Meir of the Moroccan-American NGO High Atlas Foundation, an organization focused on sustainable development through community-determined projects in agriculture, health and education.<\/p>\n

With participants, Ben-Meir explored the concept of participatory development, a way of raising living standards by supporting the empowerment of local people in taking charge of their own community development priorities and solutions. He emphasized that facilitators must allow community priorities to unfold, rather than shape conversations to their own conceptions.<\/p>\n

\u201cIs it participation if you decide what to talk about?\u201d said Ben-Meir. \u201cDon\u2019t decide the project type. Don\u2019t decide the project solution. Keep it up to the people.\u201d<\/p>\n

Ben-Meir then trained individuals as catalysts of change for struggling communities, stressing concepts of community meeting organization; conflict management; transparency; evaluation of projects in a way adapted to tradition and local capacities; and targeted involvement of often-marginalized groups, such as women and youth.<\/p>\n

\u201cIf it\u2019s not inclusive in the beginning, it\u2019s hard to make it participatory later,\u201d said Ben-Meir.
\nHe emphasized that facilitation of community development can be difficult, but that facilitators have deep responsibilities to communities in which they work.<\/p>\n

\u201cIt\u2019s hard to go to the farthest, most remote places,\u201d said Ben-Meir. \u201cIt\u2019s hard to involve the landless and poor. If we want to be facilitators, we must commit our\u00a0energy to projects and results. What happens if you don\u2019t? The project stops. Then, (the community) won\u2019t trust the next (development worker).\u201d<\/p>\n

Ben-Meir also encouraged participants to involve the Cameroonian government in community projects, referencing his foundation\u2019s success in working toward Moroccan rural development with the Government of Morocco. He stressed that decentralization is key to strong community development, and that government policies should reflect and support the people\u2019s will.\u00a0By creating community maps of development issue areas, participants identified problems in water management, such as the burden placed on women and girls to gather drinking water, which can take several hours each day; a lack of water infrastructure; flooding; and unequal drinking water access determined by geographic and socioeconomic factors. They also discussed problems with procuring materials from abroad and use of technology in locally adapted ways.<\/p>\n

Participants then identified priority development areas in water sanitation and agricultural development, and discussed\u00a0solutions.\u00a0Throughout the conference, Ben-Meir emphasized the power of Cameroonians to take charge of development in a participatory, democratic way.<\/p>\n

Amadou Ballo, an architect from Garoua, expressed empowerment as a conference participant. \u201cWe have seen something positive, and what we are capable of,\u201d said Ballo. \u201cInstead of being (treated in a condescending manner) as Africans, we know how to be prepared. We can access our own knowledge. No one will be lost in this system. No one.\u201d<\/p>\n

Ida Sophie Winter is a student at the University of Missouri and project manager with the High Atlas Foundation. She spent 2014-2015 in Morocco as a Critical Languages and Boren scholar.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

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