Networks
International
Institute of Rural Reconstruction
In 1996, IIRR produced the
excellent manual Recording and Using
Indigenous Knowledge, which describes the
wide range of methods that can be used to
record IK. / ALH
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The International Institute
of Rural Reconstruction (IIRR) is
a non-profit NGO, founded in
1960. The Institute is dedicated
to improving the quality of life
of the rural poor in the
developing nations of Africa,
Asia and Latin America. To
address global problems of
poverty, illiteracy, disease and
civic inertia, it focuses on
three programs:
Environment, Natural
Resources and Agriculture;
Community Health,
Reproductive Health and
Nutrition; and
Institutional Capacity
Building. IIRR has trained
almost 10,000 development
practitioners from 2,500
institutions representing about
100 developing countires. |
Training courses are
offered on indigenous knowledge in
development, integrated conservation and
development, household food security,
gender analysis and related topics. Based
in the Phillipines, the Institute has
regional and sub-regional offices in
Ecuador, Ethiopia, Kenya and Nepal, and a
coordinating office in New York. IIRR
produces a wide range of publications
including books, working papers,
information kits, videos and slide-tape
programs. IIRR liaises with a number of
international and national institutions,
donor agencies and NGOs. It has an
international staff of 154 people from 12
countries with expertise in training,
environment, sustainable agriculture,
rural enterprise development, economics,
health, nutrition, community organizing,
integrated rural development and other
fields.
Many
misunderstandings and mistakes occur
because outsiders and local people do
not understand what each other means
when they use particular words ... In
some cases, local definitions are
broader than their western
equivalent. For example, Fulani
pastoralists in Africa regard several
important livestock diseases as just
one disease because they have similar
symptoms. In other instances, local
descriptions are more detailed. For
example, the Inuit of the Arctic have
many words for snow; farmers in
Central America have different names
for corn depending upon its stage of
growth or its intended use; and
pastoralists in northern Africa have
an extensive vocabulary describing
parts of a camels body,
reflecting how important the camel is
to these people. Some abstract
concepts, such as beliefs about what
causes disease, have no western
equivalent. It can be difficult to
match indigenous terms and taxonomies
with their corresponding western
ones. Methods such as interviews,
sorting, ranking, building
taxonomies, and observation can help
match indigenous and western
terms.
IIRR.
1996. Recording and Using
Indigenous Knowledge: a Manual.
Silang, Cavite, IIRR.
CONTACT
Mila Resma, Training Coordinator,
Headquarters,
International Institute of Rural
Reconstruction,
Y.C. James Yen Center, Silang, Cavite
4118, Philippines;
Tel. +63.46.4142417, Fax
+63.46.4142420,
E-mail iirr@phil.gn.apc.org
Or contact
a regional office:
- Isaac
Bekalo, Director,
IIRR Regional Office -
Africa,
PO Box 66873, Westlands,
Nairobi, Kenya;
Tel. +254.2.446522 or 442610,
Fax +254.2.448148,
E-mail iirr_kenya@elci.gn.apc.org
- Daniel
Selener, Director,
Regional Office Latin
America, Av. America 4451 y
Pasaje Muirriagui, Donoso,
Apartado Postal 17-08-8494,
Quito, Ecuador.
BACK
Biodiversity
Foundation for Africa
As large
conservation NGOs downsize and the
salaries of biologists employed by
African governments and universities get
even leaner, organizations such as BFA
are likely to be the wave of the future.
Comprising a multi-disciplinary network
of biologists based in Zimbabwe with many
years expertise in southern Africa, BFA
has been carrying out important surveys
in the region, including recent work
which has set the priorities for
vegetation conservation in Zimbabwe. /
ABC
The Biodiversity
Foundation for Africa (BFA) was
established in 1993 with assistance from
the World Conservation Union (IUCN), of
which it is now a member. The main goals
of the Foundation are to increase
understanding of tropical African
biodiversity, particularly of the
Zambesiaca region, and to promote the
aims and objectives of the 2nd World
Conservation Strategy, the Global
Biodiversity Strategy and the Convention
on Biological Diversity. It seeks to
achieve this through facilitating and
carrying out research and inventory, and
by improving institutional capacities and
skills. More specifically, this entails:
(1) collection, collation, inventory and
analysis of biodiversity; (2) increasing
the availability of biodiversity
information to decision makers, planners
and other interested parties; (3)
developing strategies and techniques for
measuring and monitoring biological
resources; and (4) establishing
networking links for collecting and
disseminating biological data for
tropical Africa.
The Foundation has
expertise in monitoring savanna woodland
from a multidisciplinary perspective. Its
efforts focus on monitoring biodiversity
in southern African savannas and
measuring human impact on them.
The Foundation is
involved with IUCN and the Zambezi
Society, a conservation NGO, in
documenting wetland biodiversity and
identifying sites of conservation
interest across the Zambezi Basin. Other
activities include the production of
guides to the natural history of selected
areas or groups of organisms, and
assisting IUCN, Harare in developing a
Biodiversity Information Network for
southern Africa.
Over the
last 20 years, particularly over the
last decade, the Zambezi Valley has
seen a great change not only in the
agricultural technology available,
but also in the attitudes of the
people living there. Settlement of
people from elsewhere in the country
has taken place on a large scale,
particularly in the mid-Zambezi
Valley. These people bring with them
not only new ideas but a strong will
to achieve more than just a
subsistence existence. They have
little historical connection to the
land and are less inclined to
conserve remaining vegetation for
traditional reasons. Capital
investment, particularly from the
State, is very high in comparison to
what it was before. Tsetse fly has
again been cleared across most of the
Valley, and cattle numbers have
greatly increased in places. The
major effect of the increase in
cattle on botanical conservation is
not overgrazing but the ability it
now gives farmers, through the use of
draft oxen, to cultivate heavier
soils which were previously
unsuitable. The advent of subsidised
tractor power has greatly speeded
this process up and made soils
available for cultivation that are
too heavy even for oxen, in
particular those supporting tall
mopane woodland. Cash-crops such as
cotton are now widely planted in some
areas, and cultivation expands to the
limits imposed by technology and land
availability, rather than to the
limits of each familys
requirements and labour.
Timberlake,
J.R. & R. Cunliffe. 1997. Sites
of Interest for Botanical
Conservation in the Communal Lands of
the Zambezi Valley in Zimbabwe.
Consultants report prepared by
the Biodiversity Foundation for
Africa, Bulawayo. Harare, The Zambezi
Society.
CONTACT
Alan Sparrow or
Jonathan Timberlake,
Biodiversity Foundation for Africa,
PO Box FM 730, Famona, Bulawayo,
Zimbabwe;
Tel. +263.964424 or 964427, Fax
+263.9540709,
E-mail bfa@telconet.co.zw
for Jonathan Timberlake, Tel./Fax
+263.946529,
E-mail timber@telconet.co.zw;
for Verity Mundy (Administrator)
Tel./Fax +263.949413
The Flora
Zambesiaca region comprises
Botswana, Malawi, Mozambique,
Zambia and Zimbabwe. It does not
include South Africa, whose
fauna, flora and conservation
priorities are far better known. |
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Solomon
Islands Development Trust
SIDTs
Village Development Workers are active in
various communities, promoting kitchen
gardens, improved sanitation, raised
kitchens and composting. / GJM
|
The Solomon
Islands Development Trust (SIDT)
strengthens village life by
empowering villagers to address
environmental issues and improve
their lives. In 1984, SIDT
initiated an outreach program in
which Mobile Team
Members visited villages.
This course of action was chosen
because of the unique geography
of this country, which includes
over 500 islands spread out over
a million square miles of ocean.
SIDT now focuses on the training
of Village Development
Workers. Based in their own
communities, they work in close
cooperation with government
personnel, forming a direct link
between the villagers and the
authorities. |
SIDT
produces a number of resource materials,
including comic books in Pijin and a
bimonthly magazine, LINK. This magazine,
which features articles written by
villagers, allows rural people to express
their thoughts, aspirations and plans for
the countrys future. All secondary
schools receive free copies of LINK.
Plays have also proven to be an effective
means of communication. The SEI Theatre
Team and Mere Akson (Womens Action)
Theatre Team work together with
villagers, presenting plays that address
issues such as the effects of logging,
efficacy of traditional medical
practices, and the value of local foods.
SIDT is investigating
ways of harvesting forest products on a
sustainable basis. These products include
pressed oil from nuts, paper, rattan
furniture and honey. A village resource
center has been established, in which new
garden techniques and technologies are
tested.
In 1992,
SIDT established the Conservation In
Development (CID) programme to
support forest resource owners in the
establishment of forest conservation
areas using the Intergrated
Conservation and Development (ICAD)
approach. This programme provides a
vehicle for the extension of
SIDTs resource management
awareness work into elaboration of
practical sustainable development
planning, and technical assistance
for the establishment of village
based enterprise projects which focus
on promoting non-timber products such
as ngali nut oil pressing, fibre
paper making, eco-tourism and honey
production. The success of the CID
programme encouraged SIDT, in October
1994, to look towards the
establishment of a further unit (the
Ecoforestry Unit) to provide
technical assistance to resource
owners in sustainable forest
management. The new EFU programme
gives SIDT both the advantage and
strength to directly involve and
assist resource owners with projects
associated with
eco-timber
The programme
has evolved strict criteria for
landowners to become involved, and
the standards used for forest
management are based on the
ITTOs criteria and the Forest
Stewardship Councils (FSC)
Criteria for Forest Management. The
key aspects are:
- clear
undisputed rights and
ownership of the forest
lands;
- full clan
support for ecoforestry
support;
- a
community organisation that
involves men and women, can
make decisions, resolve
disputes, and equitably share
the benefits;
- landuse
plan that clearly identifies
reserves and
tambu areas,
garden areas, buffer zones,
and the eco-forestry
production area;
- minimal
environmental impact
(generally no roads or soil
disturbance); and
- monitoring.
Anonymous.
1997. Ecoforestry Unit I stat long
SIDT. LINK Special 15th
Anniversary Issue:28-29.
CONTACT
John Roughan,
Solomon Islands Development Trust
(SIDT),
P.O. Box 147, Honiara, Solomon
Islands;
Tel. +67.7.21130, Fax +67.7.21131,
E-mail sidt@pactok.peg.apc.org
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