Funding and Expenditure of a Sample of Community-based Organizations in Kenya, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe

Over the last decade, international donors, technical specialists, and governments have come to recognize the potential of community-based organizations (CBOs) in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Recent empirical studies suggest that community engagement, including the involvement of CBOs, adds value to...

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Main Authors: Krivelyova, Anya, Kakietek, Jakub, Connolly, Helen, Bonnel, Rene, Manteuffel, Brigitte, Rodriguez-Garcia, Rosalia, N’Jie, N’Della, Berutti, Andres, Gregson, Simon, Agrawal, Ruchika
Format: Journal Article
Language:en_US
Published: Taylor and Francis 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15368
id okr-10986-15368
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-153682021-04-23T14:03:22Z Funding and Expenditure of a Sample of Community-based Organizations in Kenya, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe Krivelyova, Anya Kakietek, Jakub Connolly, Helen Bonnel, Rene Manteuffel, Brigitte Rodriguez-Garcia, Rosalia N’Jie, N’Della Berutti, Andres Gregson, Simon Agrawal, Ruchika HIV/AIDS community-based organizations funding expenditure CBO Over the last decade, international donors, technical specialists, and governments have come to recognize the potential of community-based organizations (CBOs) in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Recent empirical studies suggest that community engagement, including the involvement of CBOs, adds value to the national response to HIV/AIDS. With the emerging evidence of the effectiveness of engaging communities in the fight against AIDS, it is crucial to understand the economic dimension of community engagement. This article provides an analysis of funding and expenditure data collected from CBOs in three African countries: Kenya, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe. It presents descriptive information regarding CBO funding and expenditure and examines the factors associated with the total amount of funds received and with the proportions of the funds allocated to programmatic activities and program management and administration. An average CBO in the sample received US$29,800 annually or about US$2480 per month. The highest percentage of CBO funding (37%) came from multilateral organizations. CBOs in the sample spent most of their funds (71%) on programmatic activities including provision of treatment, support, care, impact mitigation, and treatment services. 2013-08-27T15:57:59Z 2013-08-27T15:57:59Z 2013-06-09 Journal Article AIDS Care 0954-0121 DOI:10.1080/09540121.2013.764390 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15368 en_US CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/ World Bank Taylor and Francis Publications & Research :: Journal Article Publications & Research Kenya Nigeria Zimbabwe
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language en_US
topic HIV/AIDS
community-based organizations
funding
expenditure
CBO
spellingShingle HIV/AIDS
community-based organizations
funding
expenditure
CBO
Krivelyova, Anya
Kakietek, Jakub
Connolly, Helen
Bonnel, Rene
Manteuffel, Brigitte
Rodriguez-Garcia, Rosalia
N’Jie, N’Della
Berutti, Andres
Gregson, Simon
Agrawal, Ruchika
Funding and Expenditure of a Sample of Community-based Organizations in Kenya, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe
geographic_facet Kenya
Nigeria
Zimbabwe
description Over the last decade, international donors, technical specialists, and governments have come to recognize the potential of community-based organizations (CBOs) in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Recent empirical studies suggest that community engagement, including the involvement of CBOs, adds value to the national response to HIV/AIDS. With the emerging evidence of the effectiveness of engaging communities in the fight against AIDS, it is crucial to understand the economic dimension of community engagement. This article provides an analysis of funding and expenditure data collected from CBOs in three African countries: Kenya, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe. It presents descriptive information regarding CBO funding and expenditure and examines the factors associated with the total amount of funds received and with the proportions of the funds allocated to programmatic activities and program management and administration. An average CBO in the sample received US$29,800 annually or about US$2480 per month. The highest percentage of CBO funding (37%) came from multilateral organizations. CBOs in the sample spent most of their funds (71%) on programmatic activities including provision of treatment, support, care, impact mitigation, and treatment services.
format Journal Article
author Krivelyova, Anya
Kakietek, Jakub
Connolly, Helen
Bonnel, Rene
Manteuffel, Brigitte
Rodriguez-Garcia, Rosalia
N’Jie, N’Della
Berutti, Andres
Gregson, Simon
Agrawal, Ruchika
author_facet Krivelyova, Anya
Kakietek, Jakub
Connolly, Helen
Bonnel, Rene
Manteuffel, Brigitte
Rodriguez-Garcia, Rosalia
N’Jie, N’Della
Berutti, Andres
Gregson, Simon
Agrawal, Ruchika
author_sort Krivelyova, Anya
title Funding and Expenditure of a Sample of Community-based Organizations in Kenya, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe
title_short Funding and Expenditure of a Sample of Community-based Organizations in Kenya, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe
title_full Funding and Expenditure of a Sample of Community-based Organizations in Kenya, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Funding and Expenditure of a Sample of Community-based Organizations in Kenya, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Funding and Expenditure of a Sample of Community-based Organizations in Kenya, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe
title_sort funding and expenditure of a sample of community-based organizations in kenya, nigeria, and zimbabwe
publisher Taylor and Francis
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15368
_version_ 1764431031276929024