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Dar es Salaam Programmes Tagged Articles
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10.3 Training for existing enterprises: Support for Growth-oriented Women Entrepreneurs in Tanzania, 2005
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| Once in business, women entrepreneurs express a strong need for training in
marketing, product quality, financial management and business planning. But access to
this business and management training is limited. |
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Other Dar es Salaam Programmes Related Articles
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Wanted: jobs for Africa’s youth - Job Plans
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| However, most countries have not yet incorporated job creation plans into their national development frameworks. The national strategies include anti-poverty programmes, commonly based on Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs). These are documents developed with assistance from the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to set national priorities, direct spending of debt-relief funds and coordinate donor programmes.
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Wanted: jobs for Africa’s youth - Public Works
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| In many countries, immediate, short-term solutions are needed to quickly ease the burden of unemployment. Public works programmes are a popular option. South Africa, which commits more than $800 mn to public works, has one of the best programmes on the continent, reports the ILO. In terms of technical design standards and the quality of completed physical infrastructure, the country’s public works programme “was regarded as surpassing anything that the ILO members of an evaluation team had encountered in more than 30 developing countries in Africa, Asia and the Pacific,” notes the ILO.
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7.0 Policy/programme coordination and leadership: Support for Growth-oriented Women Entrepreneurs in Tanzania, 2005
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| At the time of the field visit to Tanzania (November 2003), there was no formal
focal point for women’s entrepreneurship development within the government. An
officer in the MIT-SME Section was assigned responsibility for co-implementing the
ILO-WEDGE programme in collaboration with the ILO Dar es Salaam Office. |
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8.0 Promotion of women’s entrepreneurship: Support for Growth-oriented Women Entrepreneurs in Tanzania, 2005
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| According to key informants from the University of Dar es Salaam,
entrepreneurship is only now becoming considered a legitimate and valued activity in
Tanzania. There is a huge need to increase this and to create more awareness of the
important role that owners of micro and small enterprises play in the economy. A much
higher value has to be attached to opportunities in the SME sector and to the role of
entrepreneurs so as to make it an acceptable and preferred option for college and
university graduates, the next generation of entrepreneurs. |
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15.0 The state of research on women in MSES in Tanzania: Support for Growth-oriented Women Entrepreneurs in Tanzania, 2005
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| There is more available research on women entrepreneurs in Tanzania than in
Ethiopia and Kenya. One of the major reasons for this is the presence of the
Entrepreneurship Centre at the University of Dar es Salaam (UDEC). |
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1.6 Investing in jobs and the community: Working Out of Poverty
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| The ILO has invested 25 years of pioneering work in the field of
employment-intensive infrastructure programmes. It has been successful. It
is now widely recognized that these programmes are effective in bringing
much needed income to poor families and their communities. These efforts
create between three and five times as much employment for the same level
of investment. |
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Concluding Remarks - Factors Impeding the Poverty Reduction Capacity of Micro-credit: Some Field Observations from Malawi and Ethiopia
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| One of the most important outcome of the analysis in this paper has been that while most MFI
programmes aim to reduce poverty and empower women through their programme, there is usually
no clear implementation mechanism to fulfil these aims; they continue to be programmes with the
same requirements and characteristics. |
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What's Missing from Leadership Development Programmes?
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| There is one area that has not been covered in leadership development programmes very well. It’s what Otto Scharmer calls the Blind Spot of Leadership, and he’s referring to what goes on inside the leader. Most leadership development programmes only address what goes on outside leaders – that is their behaviours and the knowledge and skills that is it thought guide the leaders actions. This article will outline a 'map' of the interior landscape of the leader and the actions that result when this is well developed. |
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The Future of Leadership Development
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| Leadership learning will be less about specific ‘events’ and ‘programmes.’ It will become increasingly embedded in the world of work and individuals must be in charge of their own development. |
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MANAGERS AND LEADERS – IS THERE A DIFFERENCE?
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| More and more New Zealand Companies seem to be providing learning and development programmes that focus on ‘Leadership training for Managers’. Is there a difference between being a leader and a manager – and if so how is this manifested?
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