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CASE
STUDY |
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Nammane
(Our Home) |
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Nammane
(“Our Home”) combines a Crisis Intervention Center for children
in acute distress with APSA’s Regional Residential Training Center
for street and working children.
Working with
street children and child labourers, APSA became acutely aware of the
dangers they faced in the form of physical and sexual abuse at the workplace
and on the streets, especially at night. There was an urgent need to initiate
a solution that would protect them from further harm.
APSA’s
initiative took the form of Nammane, which began in 1991 as a night shelter
with a minimal nutritional component. According to needs identified by
the children, and with an eye to their histories of exploitation, Nammane
has evolved over the years to provide timely, multifaceted help and appropriate
alternatives for children from a variety of difficult backgrounds:
• Child
labourers
• Street children
• Child victims of domestic violence
• Child victims of physical or sexual abuse
• Abandoned or runaway children
• Children in distress or rescued from
Dangerous situations
Children come to Nammane from workplaces, the streets or slums –
backgrounds which are, at the very least, not conductive to their development,
or, at worst, places where they can be abused and drawn into drug abuse,
crime and other undesirable social and personal situations after having
been identified by APSA’s field projects. During their time at Nammane,
children receive a safe environment, care, counseling and alternatives
which may help them retrieve some part of their childhood.
The two main components of Nammane are:
• 24-hour
crisis intervention center for children in distress. Nammane is open to
all Children in need of residential support. It also provides all the
required components to resolve the child’s distressed situation.
• Long-term
rehabilitation for street, working and slum children. Individual actualization
helps find appropriate alternatives for each child through education and
vocational training programs.
Nammane
has over 180 children on any given day and over the past ten years has
given 2,500 children opportunities to break the vicious cycle of exploitation
they had known earlier and to build a secure future. More than half have
graduated from our skill training centers and are working as professionals.
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The
Appropriate Education Project |
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APSA is making a systematic
effort to encourage children from laboring, slum and street backgrounds
back into the regular school system. As an alternative, APSA is also redefining
the concept of education itself for actual and potential drop-outs, with
a variety of modules of formal and non-formal education. These include:
- Child
labourers centers in slums
- Potential
child laborer (PCL) centers in slums – PCL’s are students
of public schools at risk of dropping out without intervention
- Formal
education through a bridge course that prepares middle and high-school
drop-outs to take up 7th and 10th standard public exams
- Non-formal
classes for children in distress
- Vocational
based literacy and numerically classes that complement a skill training
of the child's choice
- Life
skill based education
- Question
hour classes that finds answers to all the questions that a child may
have
APSA has
education centers at Nammane and in over 50 slum and street locations
in the two cities of Bangalore and Hyderabad. The education project works
together with the street children and child and child labor projects to
serve over 2000 children each year.
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KAUSHALYA,
Vocational Training center |
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APSA’s
state of the art training centers provide high quality need directed training
as a strategy against poverty and unskilled, underpaid child labor. The
skill training project is part of five year rehabilitation continuum that
takes the children form our field projects through a process of professional
development. The 18 month per-Nammane stage involves the identification
and preparation of prospective students. The residential training at Nammane
ranges from 6 to 18 months and finally a follow-up team takes over the responsibility
of providing support for the graduate in the first two years of employment.
Our students are as competent as university graduates and are employed in
the same workplaces. In the past decade, over 2,000 former child labourers
have graduated and been suitably placed. Skills taught vary with the market
demand. Currently, training programs include:
- Desktop
Publishing
- Tailoring
- Screen
Printing and Stationery Making
- Electrical
Work
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Slum
Outreach Project |
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APSA
facilitates development programs in over 135 slums in Bangalore and Hyderabad,
touching over 200,000 people. Our projects are based on the following principles:
• Right to information
• Political empowerment
• Economic empowerment
APSA
has built local level people’s institutions in all 135 slums, especially
involving women and youth, aiming towards obtaining basic rights, amenities
and services such as land and housing security, drinking water, sanitation,
ration cards and enlistment in voters lists. APSA is the only organisation
working with the communities in slums alongside railway tracks towards
meeting these goals. In Bangalore, there are 64 such slums. In just over
a year and a half, APSA has made the problems of railway slums an issue
in the public consciousness. Rigorous grass roots level social mobilization,
legal aid, and government networking have made this a possibility. Consequently,
two communities have received official recognition from the Slum Clearance
Board and are in the process of relocation. There has been a subsequent
mobilization of nearly four crones of rupees (approximately one million
US dollars) in Government funds sanctioned for group housing, loans for
self-help groups and entrepreneurial grants.
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Self
Help Group Project |
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This
project aims at creating an alternative credit paradigm for the urban poor
involving
Over 3,000 women in Bangalore and Hyderabad. The inspiration to build SHG’s
rests upon our first hand experiences of economic exploitation in slum communities
and the myriad forms of suffering that result thereof. After dispelling
a long-standing myth amongst NGO’s that ‘money matters in the
urban slums are dangerous’, we have now resolved and are committed
to organized savings and credit activities in the slums, working towards
effective economic empowerment. With this basic foundation laid, the concept
was concretized into a separate project with aim of bringing about a qualitative
change in the lives of families in the slums through economic empowerment,
by encouraging women to initiate and participate in self-help groups and
other income-generating activities. Not
only do the women work towards making their groups bankable institutions,
they also go beyond the financial perspective and, through these groups,
reinforce positive aspects of their cultures and societies. The result
is that these groups become effective means for transforming their communities
as a whole.
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Child
Labor Project |
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One
of the earlier organizations responsible for making child labor an issue
in the country, APSA has two decades of direct experience pioneering preventive
and rehabilitative programs for urban child labourers. We are also a major
advocacy and resource organisation. Our grassroots work has shown that the
economic exploitation of children is framed in a vicious cycle linking poverty,
illiteracy and child labor. Promoting education as the sole solution for
street children, child labourers and school drop-outs is Herculean task.
Mere physical removal of the child from the exploitative situation is inadequate
to tackle such a deep-rooted and concealed problem. The compulsory primary
education approach with its ambiguous dependence upon parents to send the
children to school is also not practicable without the provision of adequate
infrastructure and locally appropriate education by the state. We believe
that every child in the slums is a potential child laborer. For our interventions
to be truly effective, it is essential that we deal with these issues not
only at the level of the child but also of the family, the community and
the development model as a whole. The participation of the child is also
a necessary factor in the success of such programs. |
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Street
Children’s and Communities’ Project |
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Bangalore
has an estimated 75,000 street children. There are a combination of those
on and of the street and those who are completely abandoned. They usually
live in groups in self-dedicated areas of Bangalore. All of them are subject
to severe kinds of exploitation, physical, sexual or financial. Substance
abuse, high-risk sexual behavior and non-availability of basic services
are issues of immediate concern. While acknowledging that there may be good
enough reasons for it, APSA recognizes that drug abuse among street children
is a real problem. We believe that if a child receives adequate and timely
services, she can kick the habit, and try to provide support systems that
help. There are a number of communities with street-based occupations such
as cobblers, street vendors etc who are also tied into this cycle of exploitation. |
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The
Child Help Line and Police Training |
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APSA
is a founding and core-group member of Makkala Sahaya Vani – the Child
Help Line. MSV collaborates with the Bangalore City Police to rescue, counsel
and rehabilitate children acute distress. The counseling center is at the
Police Commissioner’s office and all the police patrol vehicles of
the city are prepared for rescue operations. APSA assists in crisis resolution
and provides emergency residence and care for those in need through Nammane.
Nammane has helped MSV rehabilitate more than 250 children identified through
the help line.
To strengthen the
child safety net and to make the collaboration more meaningful, APSA is
also involved in training the Bangalore City Police on issues related
to children. We equip the government machinery to view the problems of
children contextually, encouraging them not only to provide short-sighted
to problems but to relate to the systemic causes. The topics for training
are:
- The
Convention on the Rights of the Child
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Working with children in difficult circumstances, particularly drug
addiction
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General awareness of children in difficult circumstances
With MSV,
APSA has designed this training module to bring police personnel and children
together to learn about each other. Serving as a major trainer for the
City Police, we have trained 1,700 personnel. We regularly work with three
police stations in follow-up training sessions.
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The
Disability Project |
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A
slum, by definition, is a place of adverse living conditions. When one is
disabled, these difficulties are greatly multiplied. The Disability Project
is APSA’s attempt to reach out to the most disadvantaged of the urban
poor. APSA envisions a society in which people with disabilities will have
equal opportunity and participation. Towards this goal, APSA has undertaken
a Therapeutic and Social inclusion Project for about seventy children with
disabilities in seven Bangalore slums. This project involves a preventive
component. The
program aims at initiating a Community-Based Rehabilitation Program in
four slums, providing mobility aids, physiotherapy, occupational therapy,
appropriate active
Technology and opportunities for integrated schooling, vocational training
and employment. APSA will also network with other organizations active
in the disability sector for awareness creation, advocacy and improved
services.
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Inchara
(The Bird song) |
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A
Children’s cultural group, Inchara motivates talented children, irrespective
of their background, to express themselves through street plays, puppetry,
clay modeling, painting etc. The theatre group works on the principles of
people’s theatre and has performed at venues across the world. Children
learn to employ cultural activities as tools for struggle and social mobilization.
The
cultural activists of APSA work in various formal and informal venues
in the streets and in slums. Through its projects, Inchara seeks to provide
a means for constructive recreation for young people, to train them in
skills which they might be able to use professionally, and to strengthen
migrants’ cultural roots which are too easily forgotten in a city.
Among other significant public places, Inchara children’s work can
be found on display in the Bangalore Police Commissioner’s Office.
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VIKAS |
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A
one-of-a-kind project, Vikas is a student awareness-raising program that
orients and motivates youth to participate in development work for the poor.
The divide between the upper and lower classes of Indian society is notoriously
wide – while the average Bangalorean may very well be unaware of the
several thousand person slum that he or she passes every day, Bangalore
has over 700 slums providing homes for 1,400,000 people. Vikas is APSA’s
attempt to involve students from the middle and upper classes working regularly
with street children, child labourers and the urban poor. Over the past
three years, APSA has employed this model of experiential learning in working
with 300 students from Christ College of Bangalore University, Bringing
them systematically through an educational continuum from their first contacts
with these communities through to a fuller awareness of their role in such
a society, and what that role can and should be. Since
its inception, Vikas has seen a explosion of social activism and awareness
on Christ College’s campus – the college’s National
Service Scheme Program has expanded into a full-fledged department, the
Center for Social Action; students have been involved in sponsorship program,
tuition’s in a slum community, the establishment of an external
loan source for micro-credit self-help groups, and a number of other projects.
For a positive change to occur, it is essential that all sectors of society
be involved. By engaging itself in education today, APSA hopes to help
influence to leaders of tomorrow.
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Navajeevana
Nilaya |
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APSA
Navajeevana is an enabling environment for young women at risk, providing
them with residential support during the first year of their employment
together with opportunities to development of skills necessary for them
to live confidently and independently without compromising their security.
Objectives
If a young woman at
risk decides to change her destiny by wanting to live independently and
pursue a profession of her choice, there are hardly any facilities in
urban India that support her initiative. Navajeevana is a unique model-hostel
that encourages young women to share their resources and run their own
hostel during the crucial years of transition from an exploitative background
to being empowered young women.
- A
protective environment for girls and young women in crisis
- A
cost-effective but a high-value working girls/ women s is hostel
- Identification
and development of their inherent qualities, capacities, and strengths
- Institutional
support to enable the girls to be independent women
- Enhancement
of their personality for a healthy overall development
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Active participation of the resident in all the aspects of the hostel
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Juvenile
Justice |
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One
of APSA’s projects is Nammane, a residential shelter for street, working
children and children in distress. Although an institution, and as such,
not the ideal situation for children, the employment of democratic systems,
proactive planning and various checks and balances have made Nammane, a
model among institutions which provide care for children in difficult circumstances
like street and working children, physically and sexually abused children,
missing, runaway and children in crisis. Our frequent interactions with
the Department of Women and Child Development (DWCD) and the advocacy of
our work with agencies of the Government have led to the development of
a strong, collaborative relationship with the government.
CCL, APSA and other
NGO’s strongly advocated with the DWCD about the NGO participation
in running of the Govt. Homes with the help of the Andra Pradesh model
of co-managing the Govt. homes with NGO’s. This resulted in formation
of the “Home Committees” and APSA with its experiences in
running an open shelter was nominated as a member for Children’s
home boys and girls which were earlier known as Juvenile Homes. In Karnataka
the department has 46 children’s homes which include 1 home for
children below 6 years and 2 special homes for children in need of care
and protection, 5 observation homes for children in conflict with law.
2 years of work and
experiences in the field of Juvenile Justice led APSA for a new initiative
in the form of “Juvenile Justice Project”.
The association has
been grounded in the objective of using knowledge built by the mutual
sharing of experiences and learning together with the Govt. homes and
working on the strengths of the individuals to evolve best practices and
develop the government homes into ‘child-friendly homes’ and
create replicable models.
The Juvenile Justice
Project Aims to achieve
- Working
directly with 2 homes Govt. homes i.e., Children’s home for boys
and girls in Bangalore urban.
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Capacity building of the J. J. functionaries of Karnataka.
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Identification of systemic, administrative and functional issues of
Juvenile Justice Institutions.
- Develop
an external resource group and actively link them with the J. J. Institutions
through out the state.
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Meaningful implementation of the recommendations of the J. J. Act. 2000.
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Work with the DWCD in bringing systemic changes in the functions of
Juvenile Justice Institutions.
Capacity building
programs
Capacity building of Juvenile Justice Functionaries of Karnataka state
in collaboration with the Department of Women and child development, Government
of Karnataka. Beginning in November 2002, a series of training programmes
was set in motion for the training of the staff of the entire Children’s
homes and observation homes in Karnataka. APSA shared its expertise in
helping to design the training modules and in conducting the training
program.
- We
influenced the Department to include system reforms, child participation
and restoration concepts within Juvenile homes along with an orientation
to the new JJ act for the training programs.
- The
project took the lead in organizing a training programme along with
Namamne team for the teachers and caregivers of all the government children’s
homes and observation homes in Karnataka. The programme, which was held
from the 21st to the 23rd of April, 2003 at Ashirwaad, Bangalore, for
27 participants both teachers and caregivers was funded by the DWCD
and saw the active participation of the other NGOs involved in the Home
Committees in Karnataka.
- The
project was one of the chief trainers in the training programme organized
by the DWCD and Centre for the Child and Law (CCL), NLSIU, for the Superintendents
and the probation officers in February 2003.
- The
project also contributed to the training of the members of the Child
Welfare Committee (CWC) of the government of Karnataka, constituted
for the first time under the provisions of the JJ Act 2000, which was
held in September and Nov 2003 along with CCL and DWCD.
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critical component in these training programmes has been the sharing
of APSA’s ideas on best practices such as challenges and success
in running an open shelter and child participation in the running of
homes for children as exemplified in the systems and practices at Nammane
during the visit. The concept of home committees, successes and challenges
were discussed so that the concept can be replicated in other districts.
For few of the participants this type of an orientation was for the
first time in their 20-25 years of experience. The training programmes
were also useful in that the various staff members of the homes found
them to be useful for to discuss bottlenecks and constraints, and discuss
ways and means to overcome these. The J. J. Forum, (an informal juvenile
justice forum including APSA), is following up many issues through advocacy
efforts with the director and Deputy Director of the Department but
the commitment from both the sides needs to be improved.
- The
state juvenile home (boys) shelters around 325 children and girls home
around 180 children. The project has brought in different resources
of the professionals and also to bring other NGO’s and experts
together to build the capacity of the staff of the home on Counseling
skills, TOT on Life skill methodologies, Sexuality, preparation of individual
care plan, child participation, facilitating decision making among resident
children.
- Active
Contribution in the National strategy building for Quality Institutional
care (QIC).
Implementation
of the New JJ Act
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The project along with the J. J. Forum had been actively collaborating
with the department to speed up the process of the implementation of
the Juvenile Justice Act 2000, with special reference to the constitution
of the Child Welfare Committee and Juvenile Justice Boards. As a result
20 CWC’s and 5 JJB are constituted in Karnataka.
- It
has also assisted in the conceptual and advocacy processes along with
CCL for the setting up the Special Juvenile Police Units (SJPU) in partnership
with the DWCD and the Police Department by having discussions with Secretary
Home and NGO’s who are involved working with the police.
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The project has also provided administrative assistance to help set
up the CWC at the initial stage. APSA child line actively works with
CWC by referring children from domestic and abused background.
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