Rotary clubs will be helping train engineers and scientists to solve
problems in water and sanitation, particularly in developing countries,
through a new strategic partnership between The Rotary Foundation and
UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education. (click below to read more)
Through the partnership, the Foundation will offer packaged grants
that Rotary clubs may use to select and sponsor scholarships for
professionals in the water sector. Up to eight students a year may be
chosen for any of three master of science programs at the institute in
Delft, the Netherlands.
Both the institute and Rotary share a vision of making water and
sanitation more accessible and more sustainable for all people,
particularly the poor. The partnership directly supports Rotary's water
and sanitation area of focus.
"This strategic partnership with UNESCO-IHE enables Rotary to work
with a globally recognized leader in the training of water professionals
at a time when such experts are desperately needed in many parts of the
world," said Rotary Foundation Trustee Chair William B. Boyd. "By
identifying high-quality, high-potential candidates for these
scholarships, Rotary clubs will play an important role in addressing a
serious global problem.”
"Eighty percent of diseases in the developing world are caused by
the lack of water and appropriate sanitation," said UNESCO-IHE rector
András Szöllösi-Nagy. "The cooperation with Rotary is an important
milestone in the large-scale, global capacity building required to
tackle this crisis.”
Since 1957 UNESCO-IHE, the world's largest postgraduate water
education facility, has provided master of science degrees and promoted
PhDs to more than 14,500 water professionals from over 160 countries.
The institute also promotes research and capacity building projects,
manages a worldwide network of educational institutions and
organizations the water sector, provides professional expertise on water
education, and plays a role in setting international standards for
postgraduate water education and continuing professional training.
Sustainability
By focusing on postgraduate degree programs, The Rotary Foundation
is making a long-term investment in water and sanitation, helping equip
students with the research, managerial, and technical skills they will
need to solve domestic problems by thinking globally. Working with the
institute is a particularly good investment for the Foundation: most of
the institute's students are from developing and emerging countries
where the need is the greatest, and 87 percent of the program's
graduates are still active in the field a decade later.
Rotary Foundation packaged global grants support large,
international projects with sustainable, high-impact outcomes in
Rotary’s areas of focus.
Because the initial work of finding a strategic partner and designing
the general framework of the project has already been done, Rotarians
can focus their talents and energies on the implementation.
One hundred Rotary districts are participating in the Future Vision
pilot, a three-year test of the Foundation's streamlined grant
structure, which began 1 July 2010. All districts will begin using the
model on 1 July 2013.
The Foundation has previously approved strategic partnerships with Mercy Ships, Aga Khan University, and Oikocredit International.
Pilot clubs and districts interested in packaged global grants with
UNESCO-IHE can find more information, which will be posted online soon.
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