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One in four people on earth live in extreme poverty, with poor access to
basic infrastructure, services and employment opportunities. A major part of
Governments revenue and external aid in developing countries is directed to
public investment for the provision of basic infrastructure and services to meet
the needs of the poor.
ASIST promotes an employment-intensive or labour-based approach which
maximises benefits from investments in infrastructure by creating both
sustainable assets and employment.
The Employment-Intensive Approach
ASIST promotes the "employment-intensive approach" developed by the
EIIP over the years. The approach optimizes the use of labour as the predominant
resource in infrastructure construction and maintenance, while ensuring
cost-effectiveness and quality. The benefits of this approach are many:
sound and appropriate infrastructure is produced, which facilitates local
economic and social development;
jobs are created locally during the construction of the infrastructure and
later during the maintenance;
because of a local resource based approach, additional jobs are created in
the support and related industries to the infrastructure (e.g. in the
manufacture and servicing of appropriate technology);
the skills acquired during the construction remain in the local community
that can be available for maintenance works and applied elsewhere;
income generated is ploughed back into the local economy which thrives;
access to other productive resources and social amenities is improved.
The approach has successfully been applied in the construction and maintenance
of roads, bridges, irrigation canals, water supply, drainage and soil and water
conservation structures.
ASIST Objectives
ASIST's overall objectives are to contribute towards the:
creation of decent work with fair working conditions for men and women
building of local capacity and skills in government, the private sector
and communities to provide appropriate and sustainable rural and urban
public infrastructure
creation and maintenance of appropriate and sustainable rural and urban
public infrastructure in a cost-effective and efficient manner using local
resource based methods
ASIST History
ASIST was first established in East and Southern Africa in 1991 with funding
from the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD), the Swedish
International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida) and the Swiss Agency for
Development and Cooperation (SDC). The Danish International Development
Assistance (Danida) and the UK Department for International Development (DFID)
agencies joined the programme funding later. An ASIST office covering Asia and
the Pacific was opened in 1998.
ASIST Regional Programmes
The ASIST Programme currently comprises of two Regional Programmes:
ASIST Africa , with offices in
Harare, Zimbabwe and Nairobi, Kenya
ASIST Asia-Pacific, with offices in
Bangkok, Thailand
ASIST provides Advisory Support, Information Services and Training to policy
makers, planners, practitioners, consultants, communities, training
institutions, universities, funding and development agencies and, others
involved in accessibility planning and the provision rural and urban
infrastructure.
Advisory Support
ASIST provides technical advice on rural and urban infrastructure
development, as well as on rural accessibility planning. This advice focuses on
the following areas:
Policy issues
The ultimate goal of the programme is to contribute to the development of a
policy environment, which promotes employment-intensive investment approaches
and places these approaches in the mainstream of infrastructure development in
the countries where the programme is active. ASIST influences governments and
policy-makers by demonstrating the viability of labour-based technology in
well-managed labour-based programmes, by creating awareness through meetings
and dissemination of literature, and by facilitating study tours to project
sites or other countries. ASIST advises governments on the development of
policies that incorporate employment-intensive, local resource based
strategies in infrastructure provision.
Project Planning, Implementation, Monitoring and Review
ASIST provides technical input in the planning, implementation, monitoring
and evaluation of employment-intensive infrastructure projects and programmes
to ensure that appropriate and quality infrastructure is produced and good
labour management practices are employment.
Working with its partners, ASIST also develops tools and techniques to
facilitate employment-intensive approaches, maximise local resource
utilisation and promote local level planning and contracting.
Contracting and Funding Mechanisms
Governments are increasing challenged in providing infrastructure and
services to meet the needs of growing populations. Contracting out is one way
of involving the private sector to meet these needs. Partnerships with
communities and the private sector have to be established, which bring with
them new roles and responsibilities for all involved. An enabling environment
has to be created to ensure these new partnerships flourish and that sound and
appropriate infrastructure is produced.
Partnerships can be created through the adoption of appropriate policies
and pro-employment procurement, contracting and funding mechanisms. These
build upon local capacity and resources and enable effective and efficient
service delivery coupled with social and economic benefits. Appropriate
institutional frameworks and capacity building at all levels (clients,
consultants, contactors) are key to the success of these partnerships. ASIST
provides support in developing appropriate policies, pro-employment
procurement and funding mechanisms, which are necessary to ensure that these
strategies are mainstreamed.
You can read more about the activities in individual countries by looking
up countries in different regions at the
left menu.
Information Services
The ASIST Information Service actively gathers, synthesises and disseminates
relevant published and unpublished information on and related to rural and
urban labour-based technology, and access and rural employment.
Document Centres
ASIST maintains resources centres in Harare, Nairobi and Bangkok. A
resource centre is being initiated in Lima. The core collection located in
Harare comprises over 10,000 documents. A bibliographic database, ASISTDOC,
is maintained to facilitate access and retrieval. The geographical coverage
focuses primarily on sub-Saharan Africa and the Asia-Pacific region and is now
being expanded to cover the Latin American region. Documents from the rest of
the world are also collected. The scope of the collections cover the following
subject areas:
Community participation and community contracting
Construction management and contracting
Contract documents
Economic and social issues
Education and training
Employment and investments
Labour policies and practices
Poverty alleviation and sustainable development
Project planning, monitoring and evaluation
Road construction and maintenance
Rural accessibility planning
Rural travel and transport
Small-scale contractor development
Technology choice
Tools and equipment
Urban infrastructure development - low income settlement upgrading i.e.
drainage, roads, solid waste management, water and sanitation
interventions
The collection includes various forms of publications including technical
manuals and reports, technical drawings and specifications, periodicals and
audio-visuals, in both print and digital format.
Technical Enquiry Service (TES)
TES forms an integral part of the Information Services, responding to
enquiries for technical information on labour-based technology. This is done
on a cost recovery basis. If we are unable to provide the information you are
seeking, we pass your enquiry to another organisation, or alternatively, we
advice you on whom you may contact.
Publishing
ASIST synthesises, publishes and proactively disseminates technical publications
in print and digital format in the form of technical brief, reports,
guidelines, manuals and proceedings.
Networking
Contacts Database
ASIST maintains a database of people and organisations involved in, or
connected with, the employment-intensive strategies and local resource
utilisation in the provision of sustainable infrastructure. The database is
used for targeted dissemination of information and as a reference source for
expertise, information or other resources that are relevant to the work of
ASIST, it�s partners and clients. If you would like to be registered
on this database, please complete this online
registration form and send it to us. Please remember to keep us informed
of changes to your contact details.
Bulletin
ASIST published a bi-annual technical bulletin containing articles on
specific themes, project news, forthcoming events, book reviews and news.
The Bulletin is distributed free of
charge to over 2000 readers world-wide. If you would like to subscribe, just
write to us and we will place you on our mailing list.
Regional Seminar for Labour-Based Practitioners
The Seminar brings together practitioners in labour-based technology and
related fields. Held bi-annually, the seminar is co-hosted by ASIST and a
host government from within the region. The previous seminars have been held
in the following countries: Tanzania (1990), Lesotho (1992), Zimbabwe
(1993), South Africa (1995), Ghana (1996), Uganda (1997), Zambia (1999),
Egypt (2000) and Mozambique (2002). Proceedings
of previous seminars are available online.
The next Regional Seminar will be held in October 2003 in Arusha,
Tanzania. Click here for details on the
upcoming seminar in Arusha.
Other Seminars
ASIST networks through participation in national, regional and
international workshops, seminars, conferences and meetings.
Training
The ASIST Training and Seminar Calendar
has an overview of scheduled seminars, workshops and training courses.
Research & Development
ASIST collaborates with other organisations carrying out research in local
level investment planning, labour-based technology and local resource
utilisation; and actively disseminates the results.
ASIST provides support to national training institutions and universities in the
development and provision of training in employment-intensive infrastructure
provision and accessibility planning. This involves support in the development
of curricula, training programmes, training material, as well as training
techniques and methodology.
Support to National Institutions
ASIST has been involved in the development of the international training
courses for road works for engineers and managers, senior technicians and
contract supervisors held by the Kisii Training Centre (KTC) of the Kenya
Institute of Highways and Building Technology (KIHABT), Ministry of Roads and
Public Works, Kenya. Building upon the success of these international courses,
ASIST in collaboration with KTC developed and piloted courses for urban site
supervisors. ASIST continues to support these and other courses of national
training institutions within Africa and Asia.
Support to Universities
ASIST has established a network of universities in Asia and Africa to
facilitate and stimulate the introduction of labour-based technology into civil
engineering curricula at graduate and postgraduate level. Course material has
been developed by the ILO and its collaborators and is in use in a number of
universities. This material is available from ASIST to other interested
universities and tertiary training institutions upon request. Modules on
accessibility planning have been introduced into regional and urban planning
curricula at a number of universities.
Country Training Programmes and Projects
ASIST is involved in the development of training programmes and projects for
labour-based roadwork programmes for engineers, technicians, supervisors,
foremen, small-scale contractors and consultants in a number of countries. This
involves carrying out training needs assessments, curriculum development,
training material development, and training programme evaluations. Training
material in various format and media is available upon request.
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