Community empowerment and scaling-up in urban areas: the evolution of Push/Prospect in Zambia

CARE began PROSPECT (Program of Support for Poverty Elimination and Community Transformation) in 1998. PROSPECT aims to reduce poverty in peri-urban areas of Lusaka. It employs a community-based approach to carry out three types of activities: social empowerment (institution building at the local le...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Garrett, James L.
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/156953
_version_ 1855524254128275456
author Garrett, James L.
author_browse Garrett, James L.
author_facet Garrett, James L.
author_sort Garrett, James L.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description CARE began PROSPECT (Program of Support for Poverty Elimination and Community Transformation) in 1998. PROSPECT aims to reduce poverty in peri-urban areas of Lusaka. It employs a community-based approach to carry out three types of activities: social empowerment (institution building at the local level), personal empowerment (microfinance), and infrastructure improvement (mostly water supply schemes). PROSPECT has attempted to carry out these activities largely through its support of area-based organizations (ABOs) that now form part of city government. The zone development committees (ZDCs) and residents' development committees (RDCs) are the basic components of the ABO structure. These are community-level representations of municipal government; they are the community's mechanisms for expressing its voice and driving development. PROSPECT is itself an extension of an earlier project, PUSH II (Peri-Urban Self-Help Project). PUSH II and PROSPECT are fundamentally about developing community-based and community-driven development (CDD) mechanisms and strengthening community capacities to identify and respond to community needs. The paper examines the scaling-up experience of PUSH II and PROSPECT, looking especially at the mechanisms of CDD, the ABOs." -- Authors' Abstract
format Artículo preliminar
id CGSpace156953
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2004
publishDateRange 2004
publishDateSort 2004
publisher International Food Policy Research Institute
publisherStr International Food Policy Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1569532025-11-06T06:07:14Z Community empowerment and scaling-up in urban areas: the evolution of Push/Prospect in Zambia Garrett, James L. poverty alleviation community organizations urban development peri-urban agriculture empowerment community development food aid scaling up policies civil society water supply local government social conditions credit small enterprises infrastructure gender women CARE began PROSPECT (Program of Support for Poverty Elimination and Community Transformation) in 1998. PROSPECT aims to reduce poverty in peri-urban areas of Lusaka. It employs a community-based approach to carry out three types of activities: social empowerment (institution building at the local level), personal empowerment (microfinance), and infrastructure improvement (mostly water supply schemes). PROSPECT has attempted to carry out these activities largely through its support of area-based organizations (ABOs) that now form part of city government. The zone development committees (ZDCs) and residents' development committees (RDCs) are the basic components of the ABO structure. These are community-level representations of municipal government; they are the community's mechanisms for expressing its voice and driving development. PROSPECT is itself an extension of an earlier project, PUSH II (Peri-Urban Self-Help Project). PUSH II and PROSPECT are fundamentally about developing community-based and community-driven development (CDD) mechanisms and strengthening community capacities to identify and respond to community needs. The paper examines the scaling-up experience of PUSH II and PROSPECT, looking especially at the mechanisms of CDD, the ABOs." -- Authors' Abstract 2004 2024-10-24T12:46:21Z 2024-10-24T12:46:21Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/156953 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Garrett, James L. 2004. Community empowerment and scaling-up in urban areas: the evolution of Push/Prospect in Zambia. FCND Discussion Paper 177. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/156953
spellingShingle poverty alleviation
community organizations
urban development
peri-urban agriculture
empowerment
community development
food aid
scaling up
policies
civil society
water supply
local government
social conditions
credit
small enterprises
infrastructure
gender
women
Garrett, James L.
Community empowerment and scaling-up in urban areas: the evolution of Push/Prospect in Zambia
title Community empowerment and scaling-up in urban areas: the evolution of Push/Prospect in Zambia
title_full Community empowerment and scaling-up in urban areas: the evolution of Push/Prospect in Zambia
title_fullStr Community empowerment and scaling-up in urban areas: the evolution of Push/Prospect in Zambia
title_full_unstemmed Community empowerment and scaling-up in urban areas: the evolution of Push/Prospect in Zambia
title_short Community empowerment and scaling-up in urban areas: the evolution of Push/Prospect in Zambia
title_sort community empowerment and scaling up in urban areas the evolution of push prospect in zambia
topic poverty alleviation
community organizations
urban development
peri-urban agriculture
empowerment
community development
food aid
scaling up
policies
civil society
water supply
local government
social conditions
credit
small enterprises
infrastructure
gender
women
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/156953
work_keys_str_mv AT garrettjamesl communityempowermentandscalingupinurbanareastheevolutionofpushprospectinzambia