Willms, D., R. Kaware, and S. Matovu. (2016). Micro-credit for WaSH: A Choice for Women in Uganda. Solutions 7(6): 85-92. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/micro-credit-for-wash-a-choice-for-women-in-uganda/
Feature
Micro-credit for WaSH: A Choice for Women in Uganda
by Dennis Willms, Rose Kawere, and Sarah Matovu Rose Kawere
Namaddu Scovia washes her hands at her tippy-tap, a simple apparatus for hand washing made from branches and a suspended plastic bottle.
In Brief Within the culture of poverty, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) are challenged with how to initiate progressive development programs. Salama SHIELD Foundation (SSF) has worked in sub-Saharan Africa for over 27 years, with an original mandate to address HIV/AIDS concerns in one Uganda district that, in the mid-90s, had the highest incidence and prevalence of HIV globally. Implementing an approach to development based on participatory-action research principles, it garnered the trust of community members over many years of development work. SSF came alongside the community to revitalize a social–cultural institution of mentors (ssenga and kojja), which was lost at the height of the pandemic. Through long-term intervention and ethnographic research, the determinants of risk and vulnerability for HIV transmission were identified: young women in search of water, mobile market traders, long-distance truckers, cattle loaders, and commercial sex workers. Poverty, coupled with a peasant worldview that is characteristically resistant to change, threatens the resolve and resources of any NGO. Yet in this instance, an integrated response solution was offered through a microfinance scheme, which to date has provided loans to over 1,500 women. Yet, given the basic needs expressed by the women, HIV testing and counseling was also introduced, along with a water, sanitation, and hygiene (WaSH) intervention that has been adopted in homes and villages throughout the larger community. A core component in making this possible was the role of progressive, persuasive, and imaginative female leaders who mobilized other women into action through self-selected base community groups. Water harvesting facilities have been introduced, along with the necessary waste management, hygiene, and disease-preventive practices. WaSH interventions can successfully be sustained when participatory development processes are introduced, trust is securely established, and social entrepreneurs are nurtured and supported through a process of progressive change. www.thesolutionsjournal.org | November-December 2016 | Solutions | 85