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SELF-FINANCING, ECOLOGICAL, SUSTAINABLE, LOCAL INTEGRATED DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS FOR THE WORLD’S POOR

 

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Edition 49: 21 April, 2011.

FRANÇAIS


INDEX

(PROJECT NAME)


PROTECTION OF THE MODEL

 

This Model has a high social and moral value, which must be maintained and protected.  The Model cannot itself substitute for poor quality project preparation and management. Projects prepared by third parties under the Creative Commons Licence must therefore be submitted for review free of charge by Stichting Bakens Verzet before implementation.  Reviewed projects together with review comments may be published at the sole discretion of Stichting Bakens Verzet at this website.  Project review will take place within 30 working days of receipt of the project documents. ( For contact information, see above).

ONG Bakens Verzet reserves all rights of action in any way deriving from illegal, abusive or incompetent project implementation of any project directly or indirectly bringing the Model into disrepute.  The law applicable is that of  the Netherlands.  The competent court is that of Amsterdam, Netherlands.  

Complete information on all aspects of the Model is available at the FREE E-COURSE FOR DIPLOMA IN INTEGRATED DEVELOPMENT.  Just reading the course material provides a good insight into integrated development concepts. The index of references lists hundreds of resources, directly linked to the sections of the course they refer to. The index of hundreds of key words enables you to find where selected topics are handled in the course material.

 


 

(All files should be hyper-linked)

 

(Page references can be filled in for hard-copy print-outs).

 

(Complete the various sections in any convenient order and substitute the heading “MODEL FOR SUSTAINABLE SELF-FINANCING INTEGRATED RURAL AND POOR URBAN DEVELOPMENT FOR THE WORLD'S POOR” with your project title.)

 

Pages

Contents

 

01.00 GENERAL INFORMATION.

 

01.01 General information.

 

01.02 Executive summary.

 

01.03 List of drawings and graphs.

 

01.04 Typical list of maps.

 

01.05 Abbreviations used.

 

01.06 List of key words.

 

01.07 Acknowledgments.

 

01.08 Information on the local NGO.

 

01.11 Declaration of participation of the local population.

 

01.12 Declarations of support from national civil society.

 

01.13 Declarations of political support.

 

01.14 Press articles on the project.

 

01.21 Extra help in navigation amongst the project files.

 

02.00 GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION.

 

02.01 General information on  (name of country).

 

02.02 General information on the (name of county or region)

 

02.03 Information on the project area : (Name of project area)

 

02.04 List of villages in the (name of project) project area.

 

03.00 PRESENT SITUATION IN THE PROJECT AREA.

 

03.01 General project background.

 

03.02 State of drinking water supply in the project area.

 

03.03 Agricultural production and its storage in the project area.

 

03.04 Domestic life : cooking facilities.

 

03.05 Lighting.

 

03.06 Transport and roads.

 

03.07 Information and  communications.

 

03.08 Hygiene education.

 

03.09 Sanitation.

 

03.10 Waste management.

 

03.11 Habitat and the home.

 

04. 00 PROJECT GOALS AND EXPECTED RESULTS.

 

4.01 Project goals.

 

4.02 Long term goals.

 

4.03 Short term goals.

 

4.04 Activities related to specific goals.

 

4.05 Expected results.

 

4.06 The economic bases of the project.

 

4.07 Some basic project concepts.

 

4.08 Five basic conditions.

 

4.09 The development structures to be created.

 

4.10 Partners ad co-donors.

 

4.11 Parties participating in project execution.

 

4.12 The ownership question.

 

4.13 Certainty as to project execution.

 

4.14 Taxation of transactions within the local money LETS systems set up.

 

4.15 How a local money (LETS) transaction works.

 

4.16 The effects of inflation on the Cooperative Local Development Fund and gift content.

 

4.17 Project insurance and forfeit in the form of gift in case of loss of capital structures.

 

4.18 The circulation of  information.

 

4.19 Recycling of funds and importation of items needed for  productivity increase.

 

4.20 Auditing structures.

 

4.21 The chain of responsibilities.

 

05. 00 THE ORDER OF SEQUENCE FOR PROJECT ACTIVITIES.

 

05.01 Table of indicators.

 

05.02 Logical framework.

 

05.03 Activity plan.

 

05.04 Four-page summary for funding purposes.

 

05.05 Description of the action for funding purposes.

 

05.06 Summary of the project structures.

 

05.07 Statutes for the Local Cooperative (name) for the on-going management of the project structures created.

 

05.08 Statutes for the NGO (name) responsible for execution of the project structures.

 

05.09 Illustration of  the formal steps necessary to get project execution started.

 

05.10 DESCRIPTION OF THE PLANNED SOCIAL STRUCTURES.

 

05.11 Initial Environmental Study.

 

05.12 Creation of the hygiene education structures.

 

05.13 Creation of the tank commissions.

 

05.14 Creation of the well commissions.

 

05.15 Creation of the project management structure.

 

05.16 Creation of the social security structure.

 

05.17 Environmental impact report.

 

05.20 DESCRIPTION OF THE PLANNED FINANCIAL STRUCTURES.

 

05.21 Interest-free cooperative local money structures.

 

05.22 Interest-free cooperative micro-credit structures.

 

05.30 DESCRIPTION OF THE PLANNED PRODUCTIVE STRUCTURES.

 

05.31 Units for the production of items made from gypsum composites.

 

05.32 Units for the production of mini-briquettes for high efficiency stoves.

 

05.33 Production of bio-mass for mini-briquettes.

 

05.34 Installation and on-going maintenance structures.

 

05.35 Structure for local radio station.

 

05.36 Some other typical productive structures.

 

05.37 Job creation.

 

05.40 DESCRIPTION OF THE PLANNED SERVICE STRUCTURES.

 

05.41 Drinking water supply structures.

 

05.42 Sanitation structures .

 

05.43 Waste recycling structures.

 

05.44 Lighting for study purposes; lighting and photovoltaic refrigeration in clinics.

 

05.45 Smoke hazard elimination structures.

 

05.46 Education structures.

 

05.47 Health aspects.

 

05.48 Rainwater harvesting.

 

05.49 Reforestation.

 

05.50 SOME COMMONLY PREFERRED NON-PRODUCTIVE STRUCTURES.

 

05.51 Domestic lighting systems.

 

05.60 SUMMARY OF IMPROVEMENTS TO THE QUALITY OF LIFE OF THE INHABITANTS.

 

05.61 Institutional developments..

 

05.62 Health aspects.

 

05.63 Education.

 

05.69 Contributions of users and on-going maintenance and administration costs.

 

06. 00 THE PHASES OF PROJECT EXECUTION.

 

06.00 Work plan.

 

06.01 Activities schedules per year.

 

06.02 Activities schedules per quarter.

 

06.03 Procurement plan.

 

06.10 First, research, phase.

 

06.20 Second, workshop execution phase : about 9 months.

 

06.21 Circulation of funds : see bank circuit chart.

 

06.22 Creation of health clubs and hygiene education.

 

06.23 Creation of local social structures.

 

06.24 Creation of local money LETS structures.

 

06.25 Creation of micro-credit system structures.

 

06.26 Creation of gypsum composite production units.

 

06.27 Creation of recycling structures.

 

06.28 Creations of structures for bio-mass production.

 

06.29 Creation of the structure for local radio station.

 

06.30 Creation of drinking water structures.

 

06.40 Third, project execution  phase..

 

06.50 Fourth : monitoring and evaluation phase.

 

07.00 FINANCIAL JUSTIFICATION.

 

07.00 Balance sheet and cost and expenses analysis.

 

07.01 Documents for funding applications.

 

07.02 Auditing structures (ex section 04.20).

 

07.03 Detailed results for funding parties

 

07.04 Budget in form for funding applications.

 

07.05 Economic and financial analysis for funding applications.

 

07.07 Costs and benefits analysis.

 

07.10 Budget.

 

07.11 Quarterly expenditure..

 

07.12 Annual balance sheets and schedules.

 

07.13 Excel spreadsheets for budget preparation (for technical use)..

 

07.14 Built-in protection for financing parties.

 

07.20 Short analysis.

 

07.30 Systematic out-go.

 

07.40 Income.

 

07.50 Observations.

 

07.60 Funds available for  micro-credits.

 

07.70 Financial Sources sheet for funding applications.

 

07.80 A menu of 13 applications for CDM financing under the Kyoto Protocol.

 

08. 00 FILES ON SOME SPECIFIC ASPECTS.

 

08.10 List of  files specific to hygiene education, drinking water supply and sanitation.

 

08.20 Women’s rights.

 

08.30 The ecological aspects of the project.

 

08.40 Aspects relating to agriculture and food security.

 

08.50 How the project meets the Millennium Development Goals in the project area.

 

08.60 How the project seeks to combat corruption.

 

08.70 How the project area is free from the effects of the credit crisis.

 

08.80 Education.

 

08.90 Health aspects.

 

08.95 Policy implications

 

07.80 A menu of 13 applications for CDM financing under the Kyoto Protocol.

 

09. 00 SELECTED ATTACHMENTS FOR EXTRA INFORMATION AND READING.

 

Complete information on all aspects of the Model is available at the FREE E-COURSE FOR DIPLOMA IN INTEGRATED DEVELOPMENT.  Just reading the course material provides a good insight into integrated development concepts.  The index of references lists hundreds of resources, directly linked to the sections of the course they refer to. The index of hundreds of key words enables you to find where selected topics are handled in the course material.

 

 

09.10 List of attachments.

 

09.11 Bibliography on the work of Clodomir Santos de Morais.

 

09.12 Information on capacitation workshops..

 

09.13 Gypsum composites : Technology..

 

09.14 Gypsum composites : Applications..

 

09.15 An indicative programme for hygiene education.

 

09.16 A simple introduction to local money systems.

 

09.17 Information package LETS LINK UK..

 

09.18 Transparents for the presentation of the Model.

 

09.19 Power point presentation of the Model.

 

09.20 25 Steps towards local development (industrialised countries)..

 

09.21 Some information on the solar submersible horizontal axis pumps..

 

09.22 Village Life inertia hand pumps..

 

09.23 Paper on the role of micro-credit in development.

 

09.24 Paper on drinking water supply and development..

 

09.25 Paper on photovoltaic power and bio-mass and development.

 

09.26 Paper on Photovoltaic  power:  one of the bases of development..

 

09.27 Paper  : New horizons for renewable energy..

 

09.28 Environmental laws applicable to this project..

 

09.29 Peter Wier's index of single issue CD3WD appropriate technology file groups...

 

09.30 Use of pure plant oils for small scale energy generation...

 

09.31 Computerised administration of local money systems.

 

09.32 Articles 119-126 of the Constitution of Venezuela, 1999, on the rights of indigenous peoples.

 

09.33 CER certificates Kyoto Treaty : programme of activities as a single CDM project activity.

 

09.34 Grey water management in low- and middle-income countries.

 

09.35 In search of drivers for dry sanitation .

 

09.36 The use of urine and faeces as fertilisers.

 

09.37 The Primary Health Care Package for South Africa : a set of norms and standards.

 

09.38 World Health Organisation list of essential medicines.

 

09.39 Fundraising Tips for Community-Based NGOs in Developing Countries.

 

C

 

09.41 Windblad U., et al, Ecological Sanitation, SIDA (Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency), Stockholm, second edition 2004.

 

Deleted

 

09.43 New Economic Foundation, Handbook on "Plugging the leaks" in local economies..

 

09.44 Light Up the World Foundation : Information on LED lights for use in developing countries..

 

09.45 A green oil for the world. By courtesy of periodical Sun & Wind Energy..

 

09.46 The Good Enough Guide.  How to respect the people in your project area. By courtesy of Oxfam UK, e-mail:  publish@oxfam.org.uk

 

09.47: Water filtration using Moringa paste with Biosand filters.

 

09.48: How to collect and conserve seeds.

 

09.49: Roofwater Harvesting :a handbook for practitioners by T.H.Thomas and D.B.Martinson,2007. By courtesy of http://www.irc.nl/page/37471 the IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre, Delft, Netherlands.

 

09.50: Draft charter for the rights of african women, Addis Abeba 28th March 2003.

 

09.51: African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child, 1990.

 

09.52 : Development and sustainability, Capra Fritjof, Center for Ecoliteracy, Berkeley 2005.

 

09.53 Need and greed: corruption risks, perceptions and prevention in humanitarian assistance HPG Policy Brief 32, ODI Overseas Development Institute, London, September 2008.

 

09.54  Sanitation for Primary Schools in Africa Reed Bob and Shaw Rod, WEDC Water Engineering and Development Centre, Loughborough University,2008.

 

09.55  Nine Meals from Anarchy. Courtesy Andrew Simms, New Economics Foundation, Schumacher Lecture 2008, London 2008.

 

09.56 Towards Food Sovereignty : A Future without Hunger, Pimbert M., IIED, London, 2008 (Courtesy IIED London.)

 

09.57 Where Women Have no Doctor : A Health Guide For Women. Burns A. et al, Hesperian, Berkeley, 2009.

 

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