|
Transport | |||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||
Introduction While some might question how the transport sector can play an active role in preventing and supporting OVC, in fact, the Transport Team at the World Bank has being financing initiatives that, either directly or indirectly, benefit OVC since the 1990s. Long-haul truckers and road construction workers constitute high-risk groups for HIV/AIDS infection and have tended to spread the disease along the routes they travel. Along the Abidjan-Lagos Transport Route HIV infection rates among truck drivers were found to be considerably higher than the national averages. (In 1992 in Togo, for example, 33% of the truck drivers were infected, compared to an average infection rate of 6% for the country as a whole.) HIV caught the attention of the Transport Sector at the Bank because of the large loss of manpower, including truck drivers and other service providers. Well before the MAPs were conceived, the World Bank Africa Region Transport Group took action to address the impacts of large mobile populations of road workers, who were at risk themselves and put residents of the communities they served at risk. The fact that transport projects generally trigger safeguards and thus require social and environmental assessments, may have helped to accelerate the sector’s response to HIV and its impact on families and children. These efforts brought forth several interventions that benefit OVC and will be discussed more in detail below. Overview of Possible Interventions We recommend that you focus your attention on incorporating one or several of the project design features outlined below that either serve to protect a child from a risk or ensure that OVC and their families have equal access to the opportunities that the new transport project brings to the community or those that are designed to address the special needs of OVC. If you have the time and money, we encourage you to organize a stakeholders meeting as described in the section on working with partners. While more time-consuming, the participatory diagnostic process will both improve the quality of information you gather and build local ownership and commitment. After selecting your preferred interventions, we recommend that you screen them against the criteria that appear in the section entitled “Sample Worksheet to Rank OVC Interventions”. For help estimating costs, consult the section entitled “Costing interventions”.
|
||||||||||||||||