AFES-GHANA

HISTORY OF AFES

AFES was formed at a time when Ghana had fully decentralized political and administrative powers to the Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs) following the enactment of the Local Government Act of 1993 (Act 462)- further establishing the local government substructure system involving the Zonal, Town and Area (ZoTA) councils through which development initiatives implemented by the MMDAs will originate. This required a lot of community mobilization effort (pre-social media era)

So, in August 2004, AFES was originally founded as a community-based youth group in Damongo in the West Gonja District of the Savannah region, with the aim of supporting the District Assembly and its sub-structure actors including the Assembly persons and Unit Committee members in mobilizing communities to participate in public hearings of District Development plans held by the District Planning Coordinating Unit (DPCU)

However, in August 2009, AFES was legally registered as a national not-for-profit organization predominantly engaged in youth development practice with a special focus on data-driven, evidence-base youth policy advocacy whilst encouraging community selfhelp initiatives through volunteerism

HOW WE DO OUR WORK

At AFES, we facilitate civic spaces and develop advocacy tools that enable marginalized groups and communities such as women and youth to effectively interface with duty bearers on issues that affect their lives.

THEORY OF CHANGE

AFES-Ghana is a community-based, advocacy-oriented, youth-led development practitioner organization predominantly working with rural communities as facilitators or coaches, supporting them with strategic direction and input at the point of decision-making towards the realization of their individual as well as their communal aspirations. Our approach to development facilitation is powered by our quest to first create a unique style and set of expertise in the field of development practice that place us in the position of being capable of locating and appreciating our target communities along their already existing development pathways. By so doing our interventions are deliberately fashioned with relevance and sensitivity to the specific needs of our target individuals, communities and institutions. We do so based on the following approaches

Facilitating community development base on Appreciative Inquiry:

At AFES-Ghana, we undertake no project without engaging our target communities in creative dialogue that open space for us to create a focus by discovering and clarifying the issues confronting the citizens, appreciating what is working and facilitating a shared-vision development process. We then mobilize the community for collective action in ways that empower local citizens to continue to strengthen the best practices after our direct interventions

Promoting Asset-Based Community Development through indigenous
knowledge capitalization:

At AFES-Ghana we promote inclusivity in our programming, using self-help, mutual aid and volunteering as potent mechanisms through which we identify and mobilize individuals with interest, passion or skills as assets and connecting and empowering them along political and social structures at the district and community levels to lead the change that is being sought

Enhancing Action Learning: Learning by doing through volunteerism

We create and facilitate opportunities for young people to volunteer in our programmes and activities. This sets a pace for practical hands-on learning and bridges the gap between school completion and workplace experience

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At AFES-Ghana we work to amplify youth voices by promoting youth inclusion in public policy decision-making in Ghana