Livelihood Development in Post Disaster Situations: Process Guideline
Livelihood Development in Post Disaster Situations: Process Guideline
help co-ordinate distribution of resources and avoid duplication. The most important factor here is the possibility to access infrastructure facilities such as equipment, machinery, telecommunication etc. under the principles of Business Development Service provisions.
Advocacy
A community owned Rural Business collective (RBC) needs to be physically located within the affected areas that focus on the identification, facilitation and improvement of the economic development initiatives within the vicinity. This facility will help to provide appropriate technologies that are essential for livelihoods of communities and concurrently this will help to network the small/micro business initiatives effectively. The community owned rural business incubators can therefore link to outside sources for resources, as it will
Practical Action
No 5, Lionel Edirisinghe Mw, Colombo 5, Sri Lanka. T +94 (11) 2829412 F +94 (11) 2856188 W www.practicalaction.org www.janathakshan.net E [email protected]
Process guideline
activities preferably should include all. Individuals should be categorised according to the level of their entrepreneurial qualities. Enterprise based livelihood development activities should be introduced to the members who show high level entrepreneurial qualities, while skills development for employment through vocational training should be given to those with little interest in entrepreneurship. The community members who show entrepreneurial qualities need to be categorised according to their previous business experience and willingness to start a business. There are several significant categories which could be identified during this process eg: victims who conducted businesses prior to the disaster and are willing to continue the same, those who conducted business previously and need to change it, and persons who had not previously conducted business but need to start a business as their breadwinner was lost or disabled.
Selection of beneficiaries
Selection of beneficiaries for enterprise development activities under post disaster situations is different to how it happens under normal conditions. Under normal conditions it can only focus on the entrepreneurial qualities of the community members where as in post-disaster livelihood development
Process guideline
Setting up Rural Business Incubation Centres
Rural Business collective is considered a catalytic institution for rural economic development. Communities affected by disasters living in asset-fewer environments generally receive basic infrastructures to start livelihoods related activities through the RBC. The management committee of needs to be selected by the communities. The Manager of the too will be selected from the community and he/she should have basic educational qualifications and show commitment to carryout such activities. The RBC needs to analyse the training needs of the communities, conduct training programs, organise business incubation activities, create market linkages, networking the enterprises and pool outside resources. Capacity development of the RBC is the prime task of the facilitating institutes in this development process. Participatory value chain analysis
Feasibility analysis
The feasibility of the proposals produced by the community members need to be analysed carefully. This has to be done on an individual basis in RBCs. Feasibility of the proposed projects needs to cover the following areas. Marketing feasibility Technical feasibility Financial feasibility Production feasibility Disaster risk analysis
Process guideline
Build confidence and mutual respect among all stakeholders bonding people within communities and linking with new informal and formal networks Create a sense of ownership, motivation and reward in seeing ideas and actions come to fruition The key challenges in implementing their approach is obtaining necessary resource & ensuring official self management other complex issues include: Collaborative processes take time to work through and yield results, both tangible and intangible, Process facilitation takes skill, to create space for everyones views to be heard and outcomes to be negotiated, Process facilitators must display an unbiased attitude and willingness to challenge existing power structures this can be uncomfortable at times.
Many of the processes and tools covered in this section can be used at various stages of analysis, design and implementation. The suggestions made here should be adapted to suit the time, place, people and objectives of each situation