AMAREW
Amarew - Amharic for "aspire"

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AMAREW Project Impact

The impact of a successful intervention develops through a progression of discrete steps, beginning with targeted audiences gaining knowledge of the improved practice or technology, and ending with measurable economic, social or environmental improvements. Between these impact extremes are a number of necessary steps which may be used to benchmark the level and extent of impact.

Explore the project impact of AMAREW in Ethiopia by clicking on the links below.

KASA Impacts - Knowledge, Attitudes, Skills, Aspirations
Knowledge: assimilation of useful information about the intervention
Attitudes: a positive mind-set develops about the intervention
Skills: the technical aspects of the intervention are mastered
Aspirations: an alternative (better) future is foreseen as a result of employing the intervention

Practices Impacts - the intervention is adopted

High-level SEE (Social, Economic, Environmental) Impacts

  • Social: gains in social welfare (governance, equity, health)
    Click here to read about the "Water Point Development" success story.

  • Economic: gains in material welfare (wages, profits, employment, rents)
    Click here to read about the "Gabion Wire Box" success story. 

  • Environmental: gains in natural resource base (reduced pollution, erosion; increased water quality and quantity, carbon sequestration, resource productivity, etc).
    Click here to read about the "Fuel-efficient stoves" success story.

In addition to the qualitative differences at each level, an implicit time dimension in the above sequence is critical to understanding impact. These steps take time, and more complex practices and technologies take more time to demonstrate impact than simple practices and technologies. Also, because of the nature of seasonal agriculture, high-level impact may take many years to obtain.

 


 

Supported by the United States Agency for International Development
Cooperative Agreement No. 663-C-00-02-00340-00
Office of International Research, Education and Development
Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University