Completed project

Supporting the Australian Volunteers for International Development (AVID) Program in Nepal

Nepal
Women’s Economic Empowerment
Date

January 2013 to June 2018

Financial contribution

$110,000 CAD per year

Consortium partner

Scope Global (Australian Development Agency) until November 30, 2017; AVI (Australian non-profit organization) from December 1, 2017

Impact for

Nepalese partner organizations

both governmental and non-governmental, and the populations they support

The AVID (Australian Volunteers for International Development) project enables Australians to work for a year within a Nepalese organization, whether governmental or non-governmental. Since 2013, more than a hundred Australians have supported various partner organizations in Nepal, with the aim of fighting poverty and supporting the development of sectors identified as priorities by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs. Mandated by Scope Global, the Australian development agency that selects and sends volunteers, and then by AVI, an Australian non-profit organization, CECI implements the AVID project in Nepal and manages the program in the field, including volunteer placement, logistical support, monitoring and evaluation of mandates.

Objectives

1 / 3

Contributing to the fight against poverty and to sustainable community development

By providing technical support to projects and transferring knowledge, the program aims to strengthen the capacities of partner organizations - some fifteen each year.

In addition to partner organizations, the support provided by volunteers also benefits, directly or indirectly, the various populations they serve. Many volunteers working in government agencies have been directly involved in the development or adoption of regulations that have a major impact on the daily lives of the entire Nepalese population: development of a new national health policy in 2013; development, in the wake of the earthquake, of guidelines for the implementation of a new Building Code; development of a climate change resilience policy and participation in the implementation of various programs to this end (Rain Water Harvesting System), etc.

Strengthening key sectors

The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs focuses on the following sectors: education, economic development through support for micro-enterprise and job creation, and disaster risk reduction. Health, good governance and humanitarian needs (water, sanitation and hygiene - WASH) are also priority areas. Volunteers may be called upon to work on improving water treatment and distribution systems, updating school curricula, providing training for micro-entrepreneurs, etc.

Contributing to the country's development

In 2016, the contribution of volunteers was evaluated by Nepalese partner organizations. The majority of them felt that volunteer support was crucial, both for achieving development goals in Nepal and for increasing their own organizational capacities (development of their network, better visibility, easier access to loans, etc.). They underlined the fact that volunteers possessed qualifications and experience highly relevant to the mandates entrusted to them, and that beyond their mandate, they provided important support to the development needs identified by partner organizations and the communities concerned.

Fighting poverty and promoting sustainable development

Young people mobilized

Through its AYAD (Australian Youth Ambassadors for Development, aimed at young people aged 18 to 30 with less than three years' professional experience) and VIDA (Volunteering for International Development from Australia, for more experienced volunteers) streams, the AVID program aims to contribute to the fight against poverty and to sustainable development in the communities and sectors in which it operates. While a few volunteers are deployed with local NGOs, most of them support ministerial and government agencies, national educational institutions or hospitals - Cottage and Small Industry Development Board, National Society for Earthquake Technology, Kathmandu Department of Water Supply and Sewerage, National Micro Entrepreneurs Federation, Nepal Health Research Council, Nepal School of Social Work, etc.

Results that count

The project in figures. 

34

Australian volunteers in Nepal between March 2016 and April 2017

65

micro-enterprises relaunched after the earthquake thanks to $31,000 CAD raised by Australian volunteers

80%

of partner organizations describing the volunteers' mandate as “very important” in building the capacity of their staff (2016)

Our partners

Thank you to our financial, consortium and implementation partners, without whom this project would not be possible.

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