Sida is a government agency working on behalf of the Swedish parliament and government, with the mission to reduce poverty in the world. Through our work and in cooperation with others, we contribute to implementing Sweden’s Policy for Global Development (PGU).
We work in order to implement the Swedish development policy that will enable poor people to improve their lives. Another part of our mission is conducting reform cooperation with Eastern Europe, which is financed through a specific appropriation. The third part of our assignment is to distribute humanitarian aid to people in need of assistance.
We carry out enhanced development cooperation with a total of 33 countries in Africa, Asia, Europe and Latin America. Our selection of cooperation countries are based on political decisions made by the Swedish government.
Sida’s mission is to allocate aid and other funding. Our operations are managed by the government’s guidelines, describing the goals for each year’s operations and the size of the development aid budget.
Our staff members and their expertise assist the government with the assessments and the information it needs, in order to decide and implement its development assistance policy. We participate in the advocacy work for Sweden’s prioritised issues within the international development cooperation field, and we are in constant dialogue with other countries and international organisations. Part of our assignment is also to report statistics and disseminate information about our operations.
Our work is financed by tax money and we administer approximately half of Sweden’s total development aid budget. The other part is channelled through the ministry for Foreign Affairs. All our work should be performed in a cost-effective way with a strong focus on results.
Sida has more than 700 employees, located in our three offices in Sweden as well as abroad in our cooperation countries.
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Displaying 56 - 60 of 273Institutional cooperation - Cadastre - MK Institutional Cooperation - Cadastre
General
The programme proposal, "Cooperation between Lantmäteriet and AREC to provide Digital Data to Strengthen Democracy - Cooperation for Digital Democracy" is drafted jointly by the two land administration agencies in Sweden and in Macedonia. It builds on previous cooperation and achievements and aims at; Strengthened capacity in AREC, having developed business practises, enabling exchange of high-quality and updated digital data via new and improved services in a strengthened democracy - contributing to smooth EU integration and improved living conditions of all inhabitants of Macedonia. The expected outcomes of the cooperation (2018-2022) supported by Sida will contribute to this impact are; - One unique, accurate and sustainable Address Register System established, - Establishment, development and maintenance of a modern geodetic infrastructure, - a capable, self-sufficient and sustainable ICT-organization, - NSDI (national spatial data infrastructure) - updated, accurate and well-maintained spatial data used by major stakeholders, - archived documents scanned and digitized, available via Internet. Lantmäteriet (the Swedish Mapping, Cadastral and Land Registration Authority) is a state agency with three areas of activities; Cadastral services, Land and Geographical Information services and Land registration. AREC is the national Agency for Real Estate Cadastre, with a corresponding mission in Macedonia. They are also the coordinator for NSDI (national spatial data infrastructure) in Macedonia.
Objectives
The project Cooperation for Digital Democracy has an overall objective to “To strengthen the capacity in AREC in developing its business processes, and to enable exchange of high-quality and updated digital data via new and improved services in a strengthened democracy, while contributing to smooth EU integration and to improved living conditions of all inhabitants of Macedonia” To contribute to the achievement of the overall goal, the project will work towards outcomes described in 1.1, briefly:- establishment of one unique, accurate and sustainable Adress Register System,- establishment, development and maintenance of a modern geodetic infrastructure,- a capable, self-sufficient and sustainable ICT-organization,- increased amount and access to updated, accurate and well-maintained spatial data on the National NSDI geoportal,- scanned and digitalized documents from the central and local archives, available via existing software infrastructure of AREC. The theory of change of the proposed intervention is as follows - IF the capacity of AREC is strengthened and its business processes are developed by establishing: (1) a unique, accurate and sustainable Address register system, which is available for and utilized by other stakeholder institutions; (2) by modernization of the geodetic infrastructure, in compliance to the EU standards; and (3) by updating the NSDI geoportal in the benefit of all major stakeholders; AND, IF AREC is serviced by (4) a capable and self-sufficient ICT-organization; and (5) all important documents are registered and properly archived in a digitalized format; THen AREC will provide high-quality services and accurate data to its clients and it will increase its transparency and accountability level. This will enable all people in Macedonia, including the most vulnerable, to exercise their basic rights to register their property and place of residence, and thus to exercise their right to vote and to influence the decision-making in their own communities. At the same time, AREC will reach a level of accuracy, service and function required for integrating into existing EU systems.
Beira Triple Resilience IFDC
General
The programme will build environmental; economic; and social resilience among vulnerbale populaitons in the central parts of Mozambique.
Objectives
The programme aims to build and strengthen social, climate, and economic resilience by accelerating the shift from humanitarian aid to long-term sustainable development and increasing communities ability to absorb, adapt, and transform in the face of recurrent shocks and stresses. It comprises three Strategic Objectives. Strategic Objective 1: Social Resilience Socially resilient communities demonstrate high levels of social cohesion and integration, where marginalization and exclusion are low or nonexistent and opportunity is not constrained by age, gender, or political affiliation. The Triple Resilience Programme will pursue social resilience through several key interventions: Integrating vulnerable groups: The programme will work with local partners to foster spaces for constructive dialogue and problem-solving around specific issues facing ex-combatants and IDPs, ensuring that the most vulnerable are able to have their voices heard and their needs met. Local organizations will receive training and capacity building in humanitarian principles and operations. Strengthening social structures: By building the capacity of farmer associations, VSLAs (especially women- and youth-focused), Community-Based Natural Resource Management (CBNRM) Committees and other local groups, and CSOs, we will foster social cohesion and interdependence and encourage mechanisms for locally led development and investment in resilient markets. This includes building these organizations capacity to advocate for their needs with the local government and providing an evidence base for national-level advocacy. Securing tenures and assets: The programme will work to educate smallholders, share legal advice around land rights and encourage and support smallholders to work with local authorities to secure land tenure. We will train paralegals within the targeted communities to support this process and will work to assist vulnerable groups especially women and IDPs in obtaining land delimitation certificates and Direito do Uso e Aproveitamento de Terra (DUATs). These activities will help prevent disputes, empower women, and build confidence for smallholders to sustainably invest in their farms. Strategic Objective 2: Climate Resilience To increase climate resilience in the Beira Corridor, local communities must be protected from short-term climate-induced shocks while they build sustainable and durable agricultural and entrepreneurial ecosystems capable of generating a surplus of nutritious food and income. In this way, men, women, and youth will ensure that they are better prepared to absorb future shocks and have the skills, knowledge and resources to steadily adapt to a changing climate. The Triple Resilience Programmes inclusive approach will ensure that even the most vulnerable will be able to apply improved agricultural approaches and diversified income strategies within their own communities. Climate-smart agriculture: Focusing on the needs of smallholders and rural entrepreneurs, this program will work with the private sector to increase access and availability of climate-smart agricultural inputs, technologies, and services, and will promote improved natural resources management, primarily through trainings facilitated by women-led committees. These strategies will be promoted through rural entrepreneurs and around demonstration and training plots. As a meaningful shift from past technology transfer models, these strategies will adopt an approach focused on long-term soil and ecosystem health that includes perennial fruit trees hedges as windbreaks, and other practices that fit within the smallholder farmer socioeconomic context in the program area. Income diversification: To build household resilience, the programme will encourage and support smallholder farmers to diversify their production (including horticulture and animal production), create post-harvest value-added goods, and/or develop off-farm income sources that increase overall income, smooth out seasonal fluctuations in agricultural income, and ensure that when one income source is threatened by acute shocks or long-term stresses, the household can depend on other avenues for generating income. The programme will seek to identify farmers with the capacity and interest to pursue seed multiplication opportunities and provide relevant training and support, promoting a business model to address a key gap for sustainable, profitable commercial agriculture in the Beira Corridor. For vulnerable groups, especially those without access to land, the programme will offer off-farm entrepreneurship and employment opportunities. Where appropriate and desired, community members will be offered the knowledge, skills, linkages, and resources to start their own businesses in apiculture, fish farming, tree nurseries, agricultural services, and agro-dealerships. The programme will continue to support agro-dealers, especially those from the TEAMS programme, to grow their businesses while supporting others to address the need within their communities for a reliable, last-mile delivery of agricultural inputs. These businesses also offer non-entrepreneurs an opportunity for meaningful employment within their communities. Preparation and consumption of nutritious foods: Although proper nutrition is a cross-cutting issue that affects resilience at household, community, and regional levels, Triple Resilience has chosen to anchor household nutrition with activities that reduce post-harvest losses to support climate resilience. Household food and nutrition security and resilience depend upon awareness of, availability of, access to, and consumption of more nutritious foods. The programme addresses household nutrition by diversifying local production and building awareness and demand for more nutritious foods. It will ensure access to nutritious and safe foods and healthy, local agricultural products that improve both nutrition outcomes and incomes, especially for adolescent, pregnant, and lactating women and children under five. Working through existing groups, especially mothers groups and VSLAs, the program will improve womens knowledge and skills in understanding the nutritional needs of women and children at different stages and providing an appropriately varied diet. To smooth food consumption variables during lean times, Triple Resilience will teach households, and especially women, proper post-harvest handling, processing, and storage techniques. To further improve the nutritional status of rural families, the program will encourage adoption of good hygienic and sanitation practices during the handling and processing of food. The Triple Resilience Programme will collaborate with health centers and other development programs operating within the districts to integrate nutrition education efforts and raise awareness of new and more nutritious foods available from project farmers. Decreased vulnerability to shocks: The programme will work to build the capacity of local CSOs by supporting their ability to plan for and respond to humanitarian crises at the local level, in alignment with humanitarian principles and standards. Strategic Objective 3: Economic Resilience The Triple Resilience Program aims to forge a path to equitable and sustainable economic prosperity for the targeted communities. By building resilient market systems, supported by an engaged private sector investing in durable supply chains designed to serve systemically excluded communities, the program will foster a variety of sustainable and prosperous economic opportunities in agriculture and agribusiness, livestock, value-added goods and services, retail, and more. The Triple Resilience Programme aims to apply a market systems development approach, centered on women and youth, with smallholder women farmers having the opportunity to access incentive markets through aggregation of their products by youth agents on behalf of larger trading companies. Market strengthening: Triple Resilience will work with the private sector and academia to build capacity and extend supply chains for appropriate inputs, technologies, and services to support commercial smallholder production and develop well-functioning and more equitable output markets that allow smallholders to earn fair prices for their crops. The program will also work to establish technology transfer and research centers with selected domestic institutions. The programme will encourage small commercial farmers to aggregate their produce so they can meet market demand and command higher prices for their product. The programme will further facilitate service provision to be responsive to the needs of farmers. For instance, its focus on women will take into consideration their time and distance burdens. Service providers, including input supply and extension services, will actively seek to meet women where they are and integrate their needs and products into their practices. Access to finance: Access to finance will be promoted through VSLAs. If, as the program matures, some small commercial farmers demonstrate readiness for access to more formal financial services, Triple Resilience will examine what opportunities might fit within the scope of programming. With right-sized, affordable financial products, smallholders and rural entrepreneurs can make investments in growing their businesses and developing savings and assets. Private sector engagement: The programme will work with medium- to large-scale upstream private sector actors to develop and refine appropriate products and services for systemically excluded communities. It will engage LevasFlor in developing skills in youth to establish and manage natural resource-based businesses in line with the Swedish-owned, Mozambiquans sustainable forestry practices that maintain and improve the productivity, diversity, and resilience of forest ecosystems.
Environment initial Iraq 2I
General
The overall objective (s) of the Project is to identify partners and priorities for a possible multi year program in Iraq with the main objective to enhance community’s’ ability, especially smallholder subsistence farmers, to address climate-induced irrigation and drinking water shortages by improving the resilience of farms and land management practices, promoting sustainable green solutions with nature based solution interventions and climate-proofing the underlying ecosystems in the Marshes of Southern Iraq. The result of the feasibility study shall be a project proposal for a multi year programme that has been agreed with the Iraqi partners.
Beira Triple Resilience IFDC - Tripple Resilience IFDC
General
The programme will build environmental; economic; and social resilience among vulnerbale populaitons in the central parts of Mozambique.
Objectives
The programme aims to build and strengthen social, climate, and economic resilience by accelerating the shift from humanitarian aid to long-term sustainable development and increasing communities ability to absorb, adapt, and transform in the face of recurrent shocks and stresses. It comprises three Strategic Objectives. Strategic Objective 1: Social Resilience Socially resilient communities demonstrate high levels of social cohesion and integration, where marginalization and exclusion are low or nonexistent and opportunity is not constrained by age, gender, or political affiliation. The Triple Resilience Programme will pursue social resilience through several key interventions: Integrating vulnerable groups: The programme will work with local partners to foster spaces for constructive dialogue and problem-solving around specific issues facing ex-combatants and IDPs, ensuring that the most vulnerable are able to have their voices heard and their needs met. Local organizations will receive training and capacity building in humanitarian principles and operations. Strengthening social structures: By building the capacity of farmer associations, VSLAs (especially women- and youth-focused), Community-Based Natural Resource Management (CBNRM) Committees and other local groups, and CSOs, we will foster social cohesion and interdependence and encourage mechanisms for locally led development and investment in resilient markets. This includes building these organizations capacity to advocate for their needs with the local government and providing an evidence base for national-level advocacy. Securing tenures and assets: The programme will work to educate smallholders, share legal advice around land rights and encourage and support smallholders to work with local authorities to secure land tenure. We will train paralegals within the targeted communities to support this process and will work to assist vulnerable groups especially women and IDPs in obtaining land delimitation certificates and Direito do Uso e Aproveitamento de Terra (DUATs). These activities will help prevent disputes, empower women, and build confidence for smallholders to sustainably invest in their farms. Strategic Objective 2: Climate Resilience To increase climate resilience in the Beira Corridor, local communities must be protected from short-term climate-induced shocks while they build sustainable and durable agricultural and entrepreneurial ecosystems capable of generating a surplus of nutritious food and income. In this way, men, women, and youth will ensure that they are better prepared to absorb future shocks and have the skills, knowledge and resources to steadily adapt to a changing climate. The Triple Resilience Programmes inclusive approach will ensure that even the most vulnerable will be able to apply improved agricultural approaches and diversified income strategies within their own communities. Climate-smart agriculture: Focusing on the needs of smallholders and rural entrepreneurs, this program will work with the private sector to increase access and availability of climate-smart agricultural inputs, technologies, and services, and will promote improved natural resources management, primarily through trainings facilitated by women-led committees. These strategies will be promoted through rural entrepreneurs and around demonstration and training plots. As a meaningful shift from past technology transfer models, these strategies will adopt an approach focused on long-term soil and ecosystem health that includes perennial fruit trees hedges as windbreaks, and other practices that fit within the smallholder farmer socioeconomic context in the program area. Income diversification: To build household resilience, the programme will encourage and support smallholder farmers to diversify their production (including horticulture and animal production), create post-harvest value-added goods, and/or develop off-farm income sources that increase overall income, smooth out seasonal fluctuations in agricultural income, and ensure that when one income source is threatened by acute shocks or long-term stresses, the household can depend on other avenues for generating income. The programme will seek to identify farmers with the capacity and interest to pursue seed multiplication opportunities and provide relevant training and support, promoting a business model to address a key gap for sustainable, profitable commercial agriculture in the Beira Corridor. For vulnerable groups, especially those without access to land, the programme will offer off-farm entrepreneurship and employment opportunities. Where appropriate and desired, community members will be offered the knowledge, skills, linkages, and resources to start their own businesses in apiculture, fish farming, tree nurseries, agricultural services, and agro-dealerships. The programme will continue to support agro-dealers, especially those from the TEAMS programme, to grow their businesses while supporting others to address the need within their communities for a reliable, last-mile delivery of agricultural inputs. These businesses also offer non-entrepreneurs an opportunity for meaningful employment within their communities. Preparation and consumption of nutritious foods: Although proper nutrition is a cross-cutting issue that affects resilience at household, community, and regional levels, Triple Resilience has chosen to anchor household nutrition with activities that reduce post-harvest losses to support climate resilience. Household food and nutrition security and resilience depend upon awareness of, availability of, access to, and consumption of more nutritious foods. The programme addresses household nutrition by diversifying local production and building awareness and demand for more nutritious foods. It will ensure access to nutritious and safe foods and healthy, local agricultural products that improve both nutrition outcomes and incomes, especially for adolescent, pregnant, and lactating women and children under five. Working through existing groups, especially mothers groups and VSLAs, the program will improve womens knowledge and skills in understanding the nutritional needs of women and children at different stages and providing an appropriately varied diet. To smooth food consumption variables during lean times, Triple Resilience will teach households, and especially women, proper post-harvest handling, processing, and storage techniques. To further improve the nutritional status of rural families, the program will encourage adoption of good hygienic and sanitation practices during the handling and processing of food. The Triple Resilience Programme will collaborate with health centers and other development programs operating within the districts to integrate nutrition education efforts and raise awareness of new and more nutritious foods available from project farmers. Decreased vulnerability to shocks: The programme will work to build the capacity of local CSOs by supporting their ability to plan for and respond to humanitarian crises at the local level, in alignment with humanitarian principles and standards. Strategic Objective 3: Economic Resilience The Triple Resilience Program aims to forge a path to equitable and sustainable economic prosperity for the targeted communities. By building resilient market systems, supported by an engaged private sector investing in durable supply chains designed to serve systemically excluded communities, the program will foster a variety of sustainable and prosperous economic opportunities in agriculture and agribusiness, livestock, value-added goods and services, retail, and more. The Triple Resilience Programme aims to apply a market systems development approach, centered on women and youth, with smallholder women farmers having the opportunity to access incentive markets through aggregation of their products by youth agents on behalf of larger trading companies. Market strengthening: Triple Resilience will work with the private sector and academia to build capacity and extend supply chains for appropriate inputs, technologies, and services to support commercial smallholder production and develop well-functioning and more equitable output markets that allow smallholders to earn fair prices for their crops. The program will also work to establish technology transfer and research centers with selected domestic institutions. The programme will encourage small commercial farmers to aggregate their produce so they can meet market demand and command higher prices for their product. The programme will further facilitate service provision to be responsive to the needs of farmers. For instance, its focus on women will take into consideration their time and distance burdens. Service providers, including input supply and extension services, will actively seek to meet women where they are and integrate their needs and products into their practices. Access to finance: Access to finance will be promoted through VSLAs. If, as the program matures, some small commercial farmers demonstrate readiness for access to more formal financial services, Triple Resilience will examine what opportunities might fit within the scope of programming. With right-sized, affordable financial products, smallholders and rural entrepreneurs can make investments in growing their businesses and developing savings and assets. Private sector engagement: The programme will work with medium- to large-scale upstream private sector actors to develop and refine appropriate products and services for systemically excluded communities. It will engage LevasFlor in developing skills in youth to establish and manage natural resource-based businesses in line with the Swedish-owned, Mozambiquans sustainable forestry practices that maintain and improve the productivity, diversity, and resilience of forest ecosystems.
Environment initial Iraq 2I
General
The overall objective (s) of the Project is to identify partners and priorities for a possible multi year program in Iraq with the main objective to enhance community’s’ ability, especially smallholder subsistence farmers, to address climate-induced irrigation and drinking water shortages by improving the resilience of farms and land management practices, promoting sustainable green solutions with nature based solution interventions and climate-proofing the underlying ecosystems in the Marshes of Southern Iraq. The result of the feasibility study shall be a project proposal for a multi year programme that has been agreed with the Iraqi partners.