What you are reading

We spent most of 2011 on 12-month placements organised through Voluntary Services Overseas, the world's leading independent, international development charity.

Jo supported fundraising strategies of the African Braille Centre, bringing in many, many dollars along the way, while Gareth helped a growing, dynamic charity (http://www.andy.or.ke) supporting young Kenyans with disabilities to take control of their own lives become a respected, national voice in the disability movement.

This blog was part postcard home, part document of the VSO experience for any prospective volunteers, and now occasional home for any leftovers form our time out there - connections to Kenya, to disability, or to our partner organisations.

Friday 4 February 2011

Rights to a better future

I have not managed to blog much about my work yet, but last week I took part in an event which demonstrates exactly what the organisation I am working for does and why it needs to do it. I am working as a communications and partnerships adviser to Action Network for the Disabled (ANDY), a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) working to support young people with disabilities across Kenya. We are based in Kibera, possibly Africa's most famous slum.
I will detail the specific challenges and some case studies about the lives of persons with disabilities in Kenya in later entries, but the best way to describe their position is to say that they are at the very back of a very long queue to access their basic human rights and services.
The vast majority of the world's people with disabilities live in poverty, and Kenya is no exception. There's a variety of reasons why they are unable to access the basic services and support which are the platform for the success of anyone in the world, and the only realistic avenues out of a life of poverty and dependency. Hearing some of the group discussions across our workshop demonstrates the challenges they face. For example, infrastructure, the inaccessibility of school buildings, the cost of transport, food and uniforms mean many children with disabilities are not able to attend even the ‘free’ primary school provision. Parents often prioritise other financial considerations, including the education of their siblings, ahead of the education of a child who has a disability. Discrimination by communities and employers and a general lack of political will to support them reflect the prevailing view within Kenyan society that people with disabilities are somehow incapable of achieving. Their needs are placed low on a very long priority list.

A medical assessment to prove you have a disability provides a barrier to accessing the government support. For a start, it costs ksh500 (equivalent to a month’s rent in some of Nairobi’s informal settlements and a lot more in rural areas) and they are often carried out by doctors who have no real understanding of the nature of disabilities. There’s no standardised assessment; a blind participant reported that one doctor’s way of checking whether his patient was really blind was to leave the room in the middle of the assessment and see if the patient carried on talking. If he hadn’t noticed, he was really blind!

ANDY's role is three-fold. First we fill the gaps; we work with young people with disabilities to develop programmes which give them the opportunities which society and a lack of government action currently denies them.  We also act as advocates at the government level; reporting real experiences, providing evidence of challenges and offering solutions to government, We're well positioned to do this, as we’re the only disability organisation sitting on the Prime Minister's round table on youth issues. Third, we change perceptions of persons with disabilities because well over half the team, from the executive director down, have disabilities themselves.
Last week’s workshop was part of our human rights and advocacy programme. Kenya has ratified the UN convention on human rights and passed what on paper was quite progressive legislation in 2003 granting person with disabilities rights and pledging many changes regarding accessibility, education and other key pillars to provide opportunities. However, major change has not materialised. Many persons with disabilities remain unaware of the tax breaks they and their employers are entitled to, the fact that 5% of contract employment is reserved for suitably qualified persons with disabilities and that 5% of representative seats in government should be filled by persons from the most disadvantaged groups in society. The arrival of the new Kenyan constitution, with its bill of rights which specifically states that person with disabilities are equal in Kenyan law and cannot be discriminated against, provides an amazing opportunity for our beneficiaries to use these rights to take control of their own lives and place their needs on the political agenda. Kenya needs this generation of persons with disabilities to provide highly visible and effective advocates and leaders to take this opportunity and make sure that accessibility is a factor in the planning and delivery of all services.
Our programme, funded by Open Society Foundations, aims to inform persons with disabilities of their rights, where they come from and how to use them. We are running three two-day workshops for 20 persons with disabilities each in Nairobi, Mombasa and Nyanza Province. Workshops are slowly getting a bad name in development, with many donors now stating that they won’t fund programmes which simply contain ‘workshops’ as activities. Too many of them focus on delivering information to a small group of people who are not subsequently challenged to do anything with their new knowledge. That’s why ANDY’s workshops focus on dialogue with beneficiaries, and achieving an end result. We are not just reaching the 20 participants, we are using the workshops to motivate and empower them to become those advocates and leaders. One of the key parts of the workshop is dedicated to participants developing and committing to their personal action plans detailing how they will engage in civil society and become pioneers within their communities, changing perceptions, providing leadership and supporting other young persons with disabilities to use their rights to build better futures. Click here to see pictures.

The bit for those interested in the VSO process
In terms of my role, I have tried to balance giving colleagues the support they need with keeping true to the VSO philosophy of not simply doing the job myself but working collaboratively to build the capacity of the organisation so that my skills stay here when I return to local authority life in Leeds.

I’ve worked with the programme manager, Joshua, to produce a handbook which simplifies the domestic and international human rights legislation for persons with disabilities. Achieving the correct balance between doing/collaborating is the toughest challenge, especially when the task in hand is something which is considered your specialist skill (after all, who wants to believe that their years of experience can be transferred to a ‘layman’ in a matter of weeks or months?). But the easiest trap for any volunteer to fall into is to simply do the work and not take anyone on the journey with you, especially when faced with a tight deadline on a project which in your former job was your bread and butter. There’s also the additional contributory factor that by the time the first big piece of work comes along, the volunteer is like a coiled spring eager to be useful in the office and prove their worth. Some volunteers (not me, thankfully) report three or four months of sitting around waiting to be involved, and when you do get the chance the pace and intensity of the work is not nearly what you are used to. So it can be really difficult to take that step back and remember you’re here to build an organisation’s capacity and not satisfy your old task-oriented, productivity-based self-evaluation. A VSO volunteer simply has to get used to the fact that the results of the placement may not be easily seen by the end of it, but in the years that follow. I could write and produce a dozen booklets and films in the next couple of months, but they’ll date quickly and I won’t be around to write the new ones.

I like to see the booklet as a starting point and learning experience. I supported colleagues through every stage of the process, from identifying the audience’s needs to testing the product with the same target audience. We now have a case study to share with the rest of the team to demonstrate a model we can build on for future publications. I only have limited experience of Kenyan workshops, so I simply offered suggestions about what I do know about; how to meet our desire to make the sessions as interactive as possible, gather effective feedback and to make sure the participants commit to some measurable actions at the end of it. There’s never been more pressure on NGOs to demonstrate impact; to show donors (especially my own government in the UK, as I am sure anyone from VSO will testify) that your programmes are changing lives and delivering long-term results. Programmes have to evolve, respond to feedback, use new and more cost-effective ways to reach beneficiaries and deliver sustainable change.

ANDY is perfectly positioned to do this and I know I am lucky among volunteers not to have met resistance to my ideas or input. What is important for me now is to keep paying attention to what really matters here (for example, not to get precious about the use of ‘US English’ spelling), to expect surprises, to have the ‘truth’ as I know it challenged, and to understand and accept all the differences about working life in Nairobi.

I also have to make sure that I am being as flexible and receptive to feedback as my colleagues.