Mozambique · 12 August 2020 · 2 min
Founded on the ethics and values that drive inclusive progress and positive change, civil society institutions – from education and health care, to the arts and culture – are organisations designed to harness the private energies of citizens committed to the public good.
In Mozambique, these range from the Mozambican Association for Family Development and the Business Association for Combating HIV and AIDS, to the National Network Against Drugs, to name but a few. As diverse as they are, what they share is a drive and a commitment to improve the society that they live in, and Juntos! was designed to strengthen these efforts in a variety of ways.
Civil Society groups in action in Mozambique
AKDN / Lucas Cuervo Moura
The initial purpose of Juntos! was to enable these civil society organisations (CSOs) to access, create and deliver cost-effective and engaging training courses to help them address gaps in knowledge and build their skills. This is done primarily through a blended learning approach, which incorporates electronic and online media as well as traditional face-to-face teaching, as this helps to sustain this type of training far into the future.
Juntos!
represents the development sector’s community agenda in action. Partners on the ground drive the vision, mission and activities of the platform; decide what their training and skills-building priorities are; and write and film their own blended learning courses that are tailored to local contexts and cultures.
Since 2013, 20 localised blended learning courses have been created and used to increase the capacity and sustainability of Mozambican CSOs small and large, as well as to reach their beneficiaries more effectively and efficiently. Courses include:
After nearly six years, the impact of Juntos! on Mozambican civil society can be seen clearly. Observed improvements for CSOs include streamlined administrative procedures, improved project and programme management, greater linkages with academia and the private sector, improved skills as trainers, and enhanced understanding of the need to create tailored solutions adapted to target groups.
To date, Juntos! and its partners have directly trained nearly 19,000 people and provided technical support that has indirectly benefited 5 million Mozambicans.
In addition, Juntos! has contributed to a fundamental shift in Mozambican civil society from disjointed efforts with little impact, to a sector where CSOs trust each other and collaborate to bring about systemic changes in all aspects of society.
Members are now partnering with one another outside of Juntos! to tackle some of the biggest challenges facing Mozambique today, equipped with new skills and resources, and a foundation of ongoing support.
This text was adapted from an article published on the AKF United Kingdom website.