Call for Volunteers in Zambia to work on HIV Programmes with Children

CHARITY CENTRE FOR CHILDREN AND YOUTH DEVELOPMENT, this is a youth organization which was formed in 2005 in kasempa district of Zambia. in it's efforts to reach to every young person in the north-western province of Zambia, the organization has openned a new branch in Solwezi District. therefore, we are looking for volunteers who has the heart for the development of young people through the implementation of HIV programmes.

We are also calling for partnership with organization working in the area of youth development.

Official opening of the Lubuto Library project second library at Ngwerere Basic School in Lusaka Zambia

 Zambia National Broadcasting Corporation,November 2010. Education Deputy Minister Chrispin Musosha In a speech read for him by his Permanent Secretary Andrew Phiri advised children to use the library to attain their dreams. Earlier Lubuto library Project President Jane Meyers said her organisation will establish similar facilities in various schools across the Country.

URL to article: http://www.znbc.co.zm/media/news/viewnews.cgi?category=22&id=1289493770

Lubuto Library Opens its Second Library at Ngwerere Basic School

November 2010. Lusaka — U.S. Ambassador to Zambia Mark C. Storella championed a community-led, community-driven initiative today when he helped officially open the Lubuto Library Project at the Ngwerere Basic School in Lusaka’s Garden Compound. Speaking at the opening, Ambassador Storella highlighted the American-supported Lubuto Library as a model of how public private-partnerships enable communities to find innovative solutions to their education challenges. Addressing youth, he advocated that they take ownership of their education.

Why BOGO doesn’t have to be a no-no

Note: This blog is a re-post from the blog on Alive & Kicking's main site

There has been a spike in criticism of the ‘buy one, give one’ (BOGO) model that a number of Western NGOs use to encourage charitable giving. This has been prompted by an article from R Todd Johnson, in which he argues that philanthropy is killing Africa and that ‘BOGO should be no-go’. Alive & Kicking offers a BOGO option in our online shop, and we agree with the majority of Todd’s argument, but this need not be contradictory. This piece outlines the problems with traditional BOGO models, and explains how Alive & Kicking does it differently.

The problems with BOGO

‘Buy one give one’ schemes encourage individual donors to pay for an item to be donated in a developing country at the same time as buying an identical item to keep. As Shawn Forde points out, the appeal of this approach is that it is an effective tool to stimulate charitable giving, able to engage individuals who wouldn’t otherwise donate. But how beneficial are these gifts to the recipient and what do they do to the local economy?

Giving out products for free in developing nations can have a negative effect on local business. It harms local producers who make similar items, and local retailers who would have sold them. Furthermore, giving away something for nothing is also blamed for creating a dependency culture which is adverse for entrepreneurship and innovation.

Lubuto Launches Zambian Language Reading Project with eIFL.net Funding

The Lubuto Library Project was one of 12 groups chosen from several hundred applicants worldwide to be awarded a grant from the eIFL.net Public Library Innovation Initiative, for which eifl.net received funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to encourage innovation with information technology in public libraries.  Lubuto's project addresses the critical need that the educational system cannot meet for a means to teach all Zambian children to read in their original language.  Lu

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