Friday, July 16, 2010
The Impossible Dream--UN film on women's multiple burden
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
AWCF 5th GA: Improved Direction, New Member and Officers
New officers lead AWCF in 2010-2012
SEDOC--new AWCF member
AWCF holds planning for FK Exchange’s next round
- CAEV: need for documentation of case studies in agricultural extension models; and project development and management
- CULT: need to learn about branching, business development in terms of co-operative enterprise, and international and public relations to showcase its programs to foreign visitors
- CUPC: need to focus on the operationalization of its newly established Management Information System, particularly its application, monitoring and evaluation, and troubleshooting.
- FORMASI Indonesia: need to enhance capacity of FORMASI Indonesia and its members in the development of business development and fund-raising activities through project development for agri-based enterprises.
- SEDOC: need to learn about CU promotion at it intends to establish itself as a credit union league in Cambodia
- AWCF/NATCCO: need to continue to developing themselves as a resource center in gender equality and co-op development. NATCCO, specifically, wants to learn about microfinance and microenterprise development in agriculture in the third round.
Monday, July 5, 2010
Reading Matter: Gender and Development in and through Co-ops
http://coopwomen.org/awcfcms/index.php/resources/publications
- The Hidden Half: Women Co-op Leaders and Decision-Makers—Monograph No. 1
- A Development Link-A Look at Women, Co-ops, and the Community—Monograph No. 2
- MSMEs in Co-ops: A Way to Quality Life in Asia—Monograph 3
- Empowering Women in Co-operatives Through ICT—Monograph No. 4
- Learning from Experience: Co-op Business Development Centers—Monograph No. 5
- Trainer’s Manual on Training for Women Leaders Transforming Co-operatives
- Gaining Ground—Case Stories of Gender and Development in the Co-op
- Regional Forum on “ICT Applications in Enterprise Development: Building Networks and Opportunities for Women Entrepreneurs in Co-operatives”
- Regional Conference on “Gender Integration in Co-operatives: 10 Years Before and After”
- Transformative Leadership Adoption Assessment: A Manual for Co-operatives
- Regional Conference Report—Transformative Leadership for Co-operatives in Asia: Transforming Leadership, Transforming Co-operatives, Transforming Society
- Conference Report—Regional Forum on Women, Gender and Co-operatives in Asia: Meeting Challenges, Exploring Opportunities
- Trainer's Manual on Transformative Leadership Training for Co-operatives: Transformative Leadership, Transformative Co-operatives
- Gender-Sensitivity Training: A Manual for Co-ops in Malaysia
- A Training Manual on Gender and Co-operatives in Thailand
- Gender Impact of Globalization of the Economy: Challenges to Co-operatives in the New Millennium
- Less Words, More Action: How to Increase Women's Participation in Leadership and Decision-Making in Co-operatives
- Liberating Co-ops: A Guide to Creating Women-Friendly and Gender-Responsive Co-ops in the Philippines
- Regional Conference Report on “Women in Decision-Making in Co-operatives”
- A Declaration and Platform of Action for the Enhancement of Women's Participation in Leadership and Decision-Making in Co-operatives
- Liberating Co-ops: Stories of Women-Friendly and Gender-Responsive Co-operatives in the Philippines
- Conference Report: A Showcase of Gender-Responsive Co-operatives in Asia
- Liberating Co-ops—A Video Documentary
What Programs does AWCF have?
AWCF implements activities toward Gender Mainstreaming, Women in Leadership and Decision-Making, Women Entrepreneurship Development, Regional Policy Advocacy, and Advocacy on Support Services for Women.
Gender Mainstreaming
Enabling co-ops, community-based savings and credit organizations, and development non-government organizations (NGOs) and people’s organizations (POs) to mainstream and integrate gender concerns and perspectives in their policies, programs, and activities.
Women in Leadership and Decision-Making
Promoting the increased participation of women in leadership and decision-making in co-ops, community-based savings and credit organizations, and development NGOs and POs engaged in the promotion of co-ops. The varied activities include training on the vision of transformative leadership.
Women Entrepreneurship Development
Enhancing women’s entrepreneurial skills and advocating the mobilization of co-op resources to support women-owned and/or women-managed enterprises. This program also involves advocating for co-ops to set up co-op business development centers (BDCs) to provide services to members who have micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs); build capacities of women entrepreneurs, especially those in micro-enterprises; provide micro-finance, education, and skills upgrading, physical space/facilities, access to appropriate low-cost technology, and information and communication technology; and other services.
Regional Policy Advocacy
Analyzing the gender impact of cross-cutting issues affecting co-ops and community-based savings and credit organizations in
Advocacy on Support Services for Women
Advocating for co-ops to use their resources for support services to women members in response to practical and strategic needs, such as micro-credit, training on non-traditional trades, literacy classes, childcare, and assistance to women victims of violence and their protection.
Sunday, July 4, 2010
AWCF Members-Organizations--empowering women and men in Asia
- a non-government and non-profit organization, set up in 1991 by key officers and staff of the National Institute for Agricultural Planning and Projection (NIAPP). The NIAPP is an agency under Vietnam's Ministry of Agricultural and Rural Development, which oversees and regulates agricultural co-operatives in the country. Through NIAPP, CAEV aims to respond to the needs of more than 16,340 agricultural co-operatives (as of 1994) and 11 million farm households (as of 2003) in Vietnam.
- established to improve farming practices and increase income of poor farmers. CAEV recruits agronomists, agricultural scientists, skilled technicians, and community workers as volunteers. It provides agricultural extension services to poor farming communities; soil sampling and analysis, and land evaluation; and identification of suitable cropping patterns for each farm household. CAEV also provides technical assistance on the practice of VAC combined technique (gardening, fish rearing and livestock breeding in a small scale).
- addresses the needs of agricultural communities with a special focus on agricultural extension and rural development. Women in the agricultural sector in Vietnam are involved in the following activities: setting up mutual help groups, pilot field demonstration, creation of revolving funds to address the lack of production capital, and publication of magazines on agriculture.
- serves as a resource agency to the government as well as to international development agencies in developing genuine co-ops.
- a national organization initiated by the private sector in 1972, bringing together more than 1,000 Thai credit co-operative groups, with more than 550,000 individual members, with women comprising more than 60 percent of the membership, as of year 2006.
- works toward developing a strong and viable credit union (CU) movement in Thailand founded on the values of commitment, honesty, sacrifice, responsibility, sympathy, and trust, to promote self-help and mutual help to achieve human development and peace.
- commits itself to delivering excellent financial services and other services that will respond to both the social and economic needs of the members.
- has programs and activities that include education and training, bookkeeping and accounting, dormitory and meeting room services, CU chapters promotion, women and youth development, mutual aid in CU, business enterprise development, information technology, and research and publications.
- since 1998, has been addressing the role and participation of women in co-ops, and part of its organizational structure is a Gender and Development (GAD) Committee that serves as advisory body on gender concerns to the CULT Board and General Assembly. Its Women Co-operative Products Development Center (WCPC) helps sustain women co-ops’ initiatives to create and develop products, for instance, through support in marketing and product development and design.
- was registered in 1974 under the Societies Act of Malaysia, with the main objective of introducing grassroots economic initiatives for the poor in Malaysia, especially the Indian poor.
- initially engaged in collective farming, consumer bulk buying, and income-generation projects, and after CUPC leaders obtained training on CUs from the Philippines, India, and Canada, the CUPC began to promote, organize, coordinate, and consolidate CUs among the unorganized sector in Malaysia.
- a partnership of two major but parallel grassroots-based credit unions in Malaysia: the Koperasi Kredit Pekerja-Pekerja or KKP (Workers' Credit Co-op) in Kuala Lumpur and the Koperasi Kredit Rakyat or KKR (People's Credit Co-op) in Batang Berjuntai. Many of the members of KKP are workers of multinational companies in free trade zones in Kuala Lumpur and mining companies in nearby states. The majority of the members of the KKR, on the other hand, are plantation workers, paddy farmers, and fisherfolks.
- its role as coordinating body is to introduce various education and training programs; design and introduce new service and products; and do public relations and establish international links.
- Women Action Committees (WACs) formed in CUs at all levels help women to organize themselves and undergo basic education and training; and to increase their self-awareness, self-esteem, and self-confidence. The WAC has been transformed into the Gender and Development Committee (GAD) Committee, composed of women and selected gender-sensitized men (after gender-sensitivity training).
- a national network organization established in 1987 by 10 non-government organizations (NGOs) concerned with the co-op movement, and in small and medium enterprise (SME) development in Indonesia.
- started as a Dialogue Forum among its founding members: DEKOPIN (Dewan Koperasi Indonesia or the Indonesia Co-operative Council), and nine other NGOs. The Forum became official with a letter of agreement officially issued by DEKOPIN on February 26, 1986. Later, a baseline survey on co-ops that were not government-sponsored (that is, not KUD [Koperasi Unit Desa] or village co-op, which is supported by the government) and informal co-ops in 14 provinces from January to March 1986 was conducted by the Forum as its first activity. The survey results showed that that there was a demand for a co-op development program directly managed by an NGO.
- through volunteer consultants from its member NGOs, FORMASI conducts capacity-building programs for members and even non-member NGOs, such as information technology (IT) skills development and training; an entrepreneurial exchange program; and training on gender awareness, gender mainstreaming, and transformative leadership.
- engages in consultancy, education and training, information dissemination and promotion concerning community-based co-op development, gender and development, and the provision of seed capital.
- co-op education and training centers, which started in the 1960s, in the geographical regions of the Philippines formed NATCCO in 1977 to serve as their spokesperson, secretariat, and coordinating body.
- also came about primarily as a felt need of the regional centers to put up a united national front, as the private sector-initiated co-ops at that time were under threat from the Marcos dictatorship in the 1970s.
- as the years passed, the grassroots co-ops grew more in number and in their need for assistance from their regional centers and NATCCO. This development compelled NATCCO to pursue new directions, and to develop and expand services and programs, apart from the original mandate of education and training. The regional centers moved on to become total co-op regional development centers (RDCs).
- in 2002, a General Assembly resolution was passed to study the restructuring of NATCCO’s transformation from a three-tiered to a two-tiered structure. NATCCO’s bylaws were amended in 2004, with financial intermediation as NATCCO’s principal focus, and the primary co-ops becoming NATCCO’s direct members. In 2006, NATCCO launched its new vision and mission statements.
- NATCCO has Financial Services and Allied Services, and it started its activities for women in 1988, beginning with women in development (WID) concepts, as a component of Canadian-assisted project. In 1994, with the growth of WID to women and development (WAD) and to GAD, NATCCO formed the Association of Gender Advocates in Development (AGAD). AGAD was tasked to consolidate NATCCO’s initiatives in GAD across co-ops; coordinate and implement GAD activities; and serve as a pool of resources, experiences, and ideas within NATCCO.
- in the NATCCO Women’s Congress held before a NATCCO GA, there is the election for one representative each from the Philippines’s geographical regions—Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao—to sit in the NATCCO Gender Executive Committee (ExeCom). The election of these representatives is affirmed by the NATCCO GA, to serve a one-year term in the Gender ExeCom. One of them is also elected to sit in the NATCCO Board, representing the women’s sector in co-ops.
- NATCCO sits in the Philippine Congress through the Coop-NATCCO Party List group.
- an NGO established in 1991, its field of expertise is in community development, particularly concerning rural and agricultural advancement. After doing humanitarian projects for several years, SEDOC focused on implementing income-generating projects and establishing credit unions to help the marginalized poor become self-reliant, thereby assisting in curbing poverty in Cambodia.
- major programs include sustainable agriculture, promotion of agricultural and credit co-ops, establishment of rice banks, forestry and environment, and promotion of gender equality.
- its area of work reaches out to at least five provinces of Cambodia, covering about 70 villages.