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SUSTAINING THE INTERVENTION
Beyond a Single Mobilizer
Module Introduction (hub)
Documents Included in this Sustaining Module
If you visit a weights lifting gym only once, you will not build your muscles
If you look again at the key words and basic concepts mentioned in
Chapter One as important for you to know, you will find the word
"sustainability." (It is not found in most dictionaries). How can
something we put in place be made sustainable so that it stays in place?
For the community, whose goal was improved health, and objective was
to construct a latrine, its concern with sustainability is in questions
like, "How do we ensure the latrine will be kept clean, repaired,
maintained and used?"
The answer is in ensuring community responsibility (by community
participation in decision making and control) from the beginning of the
project.
For you, who has put in place a social process of social change,
strengthening the community, your concern with sustainability is more
in questions like, "How will the community continue to take charge of
its improvements, making her assessments, choosing new priorities,
seeking new resources, undertaking new actions, increasing its self
reliance?"
The goals of you and of the community are different but
complementary. You want your intervention to be sustained. The question
of sustainability is answered in how you go about your mobilization.
Your goal is not a once-and-for-all latrine, school, clinic or water supply. It is sustainable development.
This module looks at how you can make your work sustainable. Part
of the answer lies in repeating the mobilization cycle itself; part of
it lies in identifying and training mobilizers from within the target
community.
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