LIDS Event – Community Development in Rural India: An NGO Perspective

Event: Community Development in Rural India: An NGO Perspective

When: October 9, 2013 at noon

Location: WCC 1010

Sister Lucy Kurien is the founder of Maher, an interfaith NGO focused on rural development and women’s issues in India. For 17 years, Maher has been running projects all over India including homes for abused and battered women, street children, and the elderly. Currently Maher has 765 children and 240 women in its homes. Maher also trains destitute women in various tradecrafts such as sewing and jewelry making, enabling them to live independently with sustainable income. So far, 2230 women have passed through Maher’s training programs. In order to address the broader development issues facing rural India, Maher also organizes 465 self-help groups in which Maher staff leads discussions with community leaders and women. The topics range from AIDS awareness and importance of education to sustainable farming practices and rainwater harvesting.

Sister Lucy’s talk will focus on the importance of addressing women’s issues for broader community development and the self-help groups. She will discuss the successes and improvements in these communities as well as the failures, and where she sees the greatest challenges to India’s development objects and how we can turn them into opportunities for developing the country’s most impoverished areas.

Opportunity: Law Fellowships in Legal Empowerment, Namati

Namati is an international NGO dedicated to advancing legal empowerment. Namati works at the grassroots level to put law into people’s hands.  They currently have programs in Sierra Leone, India, Liberia, Uganda, Mozambique, Burma, Kenya, and Bangladesh, where we address a range of issues, from strengthening rights over land and natural resources, to improving accountability for essential services like health and education.  Harvard Law School alumna Abigail Moy is a Program Director at our Washington, DC office.  A variety of fellowships are available to current students and recent graduates in Namati’s US and foreign offices. Fellows are provided with a hands-on experience working on behalf of communities around the world. For more information, please visit our website at http://www.namati.org/about/employment-opportunities/ or click here.  Kindly note that these fellowships are unpaid, so students are encouraged to seek independent funding sources.