#SDGAction11967
ENUGU 3MC Roll Back Malaria Waste & Sanitation
Description/achievement of initiative

HRRDC and partners will design toolkit for education sector especially for primary & secondary school in Enugu on how they should respond to malaria; the benefits of controlling malaria in schools; the appropriate malaria interventions which can be delivered through schools;examples of promising practice at scale; the key issues in developing a school malaria programme & sanitation. A large body of useful technological knowledge lies in the public domain. There is a need for the access of developing countries to such technologies

Implementation methodologies

The HRRDC professional will help the education sector respond to malaria;equally conduct an enlighten campaign seminars and conference the benefits of controlling malaria in schools; the appropriate malaria interventions which can be delivered through schools;examples of promising practice at scale; the key issues in developing a school malaria programme; how toformulate a national Malaria Control in Schools strategy;and how to design a malaria component of a widerschool health programm/sanitation.New and efficient technologies will be essential to increase the capabilities, in particular of developing countries, to achieve sustainable development, sustain the world's economy, protect the environment, and alleviate poverty and human suffering. Inherent in these activities is the need to address the improvement of technology currently used and its replacement, when appropriate, with more accessible and more environmentally sound technology. The methodology will be technically driven followed the international performance standard and utilization by lead project manager of the Human Rights Research & Development Center Nigeria.

Arrangements for Capacity-Building and Technology Transfer

Environmentally sound technologies protect the environment, are less polluting, use all resources in a more sustainable manner, recycle more of their wastes and products, and handle residual wastes in a more acceptable manner than the technologies for which they were substitutes. There is a need for favourable access to and transfer of environmentally sound technologies, in particular to developing countries, through supportive measures that promote technology cooperation and that should enable transfer of necessary technological know-how as well as building up of economic, technical, and managerial capabilities for the efficient use and further development of transferred technology. Technology cooperation involves joint efforts by enterprises and Governments, both suppliers of technology and its recipients. Therefore, such cooperation entails an iterative process involving government, the private sector, and research and development facilities to ensure the best possible results from transfer of technology. Successful long-term partnerships in technology cooperation necessarily require continuing systematic training and capacity-building at all levels over an extended period of time.

Coordination mechanisms/governance structure

The coordinate mechanism should be by experts and professional who are engaged with NGOs & civil society in EnuguThe evidence of declining transmission and disease burden.As transmission declines, school-age children will increasingly become an important clinical risk group.Within this context, it is hoped that the Malaria Control in Schools toolkit will facilitate professionals within theeducation sector to develop effective programmes on the prevention and control of malaria for school-agechildren within malaria endemic countries.The availability of scientific and technological information and access to and transfer of environmentally sound technology are essential requirements for sustainable development. Providing adequate information on the environmental aspects of present technologies consists of two interrelated components: upgrading information on present and state-of-the-art technologies, including their environmental risks, and improving access to environmentally sound technologies.

Partner(s)

Human Rights Research and Development Center Nigeria, Women for Women Group ENUGU
Progress reports
Goal 3
15/07/2016
Based on standard and utilization of expert
Financing (in USD)
50,000 USD

Basic information
Time-frame: 07/2016 - 06/2017
Partners
Human Rights Research and Development Center Nigeria, Women for Women Group ENUGU
Countries
Contact information
IKECHUKWU CELESTINE ONYIA, ENGINEER, humanrightsresearchdc@gmail.com
United Nations