In order to improve the quality of health services and health data at the community level in Madagascar, the USAID Mikolo Project worked with the Ministry of Public Health (MOPH), the private sector, other local and international implementing partners, and end users to develop a mobile health (mHealth) application.
CLA addresses two project questions: can STEAM learning be embedded in resource-poor environments, and can implementation be sustainable?
The Feed the Future Mozambique Agricultural Innovations Activity (FTF Inova), funded by USAID and implemented since 2017 by DAI and its subcontractors Technoserve, EVI, and MSA, aims to improve the lives of smallholder farmers by stimulating a more inclusive agricultural market.
Within the past few years RTI has focused internally on intentionally growing our efforts to share and learn from each other across the organization, using a CLA approach to guide us.
This case reflects on how the partnership generated lessons and evidence on what’s happening and what’s working in a collaborative learning space to provide impetus for collaboration, learning and adapting.
Sabal utilized the CLA approaches of "M&E for Learning," "Pause and Reflect," and "Adaptive Management" to identify sustainability strategies, assess the level of self-reliance among community groups, tailor interventions based on the data, and gain consensus and buy-in among internal staff, consortium partners, and the local government.
From October 2018-March 2019, Breakthrough ACTION, in collaboration with the Jamaica MOH, facilitated the first two phases of the FlowChart, Define and Design & Test, to address the issue of mosquito breeding in water drums in urban and peri-urban areas of Jamaica.
USFS, as demonstrated through this project, enables adaptive management at an organizational level as well, through our long-term relationships, institutional memory, and commitment to using natural resources as an entry point to achieve development priorities.
This case describes a CLA approach that sought to disprove an often-cited claim by men in the peace process in Myanmar that "there are no qualified women to invite to discussions on peace.
Food insecurity, disease, and inadequate dietary intake are major public health problems across Khatlon province in southwestern Tajikistan.