• Encouraging enterprises to expand into new markets: FNMD

  • Enabling business at the national and provincial levels: MSME2

  • Working with water providers to increase access to services: ESP

  • Ensuring security and justice sector accountability: SSAPR

Projects

DAI projects cover the full spectrum of development disciplines. We are building local capacity to fight disease in outbreak hot spots around the world. We are training local armed forces in civil-military relations in Africa, and we are active in the education sector in Palestine. Working arm in arm with local organizations, we have strengthened the credit system for Moroccan entrepreneurs, helped Haiti’s hillside farmers raise their incomes, improved natural resource management in the Philippines, mitigated conflict in Liberia, and fostered responsive local governments in Serbia. In all of our projects, we emphasize inclusion, participation, and sustainability.

Kenya—Microfinance Capacity Building Project (KEMCAP)

As the trade and financial hub for East Africa, Kenya has been a leader in developing a network of microfinance institutions that extend loans to small farms, businesses, and entrepreneurs. The Association of Microfinance Institutions (AMFI) was formed to serve the interests of these institutions by creating an enabling environment for microfinance, sharing best practices, and creating business connections between various regional firms.

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Kenya—Transition Initiative Program (KTI)

Adopted in the wake of flawed national elections and resulting interethnic violence in 2007, Kenya’s February 2008 peace accord and power-sharing agreement afford Kenyans the political framework around which they can begin to rebuild their country. The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)’s Office of Transition Initiatives (OTI) is working to help Kenya restore its position as an anchor of stability in the Greater Horn of Africa region. Through assistance in reducing tensions and by enabling economic, political, and social recovery, the Kenya Transition Initiative Program (KTI) is helping to renew the nation’s confidence and capacity in addressing instability, political marginalization, and violence.

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Kosovo—Ministry of Foreign Affairs Support (KMFAS)

Until recently, the fledgling nation of Kosovo’s most pressing concern was not governing as an independent state, but finalizing its territorial status. With that issue resolved, Kosovo’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) began establishing itself as an institution, creating an embassy presence in foreign countries, and negotiating international agreements and treaties related to its status as a sovereign country.

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Kyrgyzstan—Parliamentary Strengthening Program (KPSP)

In April 2010, the Government of Kyrgyzstan and its president were brought down amid protests over corruption, abuse of power, and increasing utility prices. Within days a new government assumed power, followed in June 2010 by a new constitution and parliamentary system. The first elections to the new parliament—the Jogorku Kenesh, or Supreme Council—were held October 10, 2010. To effect reform and stability, parliament must work toward three intertwined objectives: being a constructive actor in government, a responsive and representative body, and a well-managed institution.

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Latin America and the Caribbean—Technologies for Financial Inclusion (Tec-In)

The Tec-In project works to identify and develop innovations in the use of information and communications technology (ICT) to expand access to financial services throughout Latin America and the Caribbean.

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Lebanon—Water and Wastewater Sector Support (LWWSS)

Lebanon is saddled with a multitude of water and wastewater infrastructure investments that are failing to adequately deliver benefits to its people. The companies that provide water face crippling staff shortages and an aging workforce, poor customer relations, low tariffs that fail to recover operating costs, lack of metering, excessive nonrevenue water, and years of underinvestment in the water and wastewater infrastructure. Since 2009, the Lebanon Water and Wastewater Sector Support (LWWSS) project has been addressing these challenges by partnering with Lebanon’s four water establishments and the Ministry of Energy and Water.

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Lebanon—Water Policy Program (LWPP)

Under the LWPP, DAI supported the Ministry of Energy and Water and the Water Establishments in Lebanon, guiding Lebanese ministry and water establishments’ officials through the complicated process of identifying and implementing sustainable financing and privatization techniques.

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Lesotho—Apparel Lesotho Alliance to Fight Aids (ALAFA) Project

The apparel industry is Lesotho’s largest private sector employer with approximately 46,000 people employed. In 2005, it was estimated that one third, or 15,000, of these workers were HIV positive. Most apparel industry employees are young women, and it is this gender and age group whose risk of HIV infection is greatest. 

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Liberia—Building Recovery and Reform Through Democratic Governance (BRDG-Liberia)

Since 1979, chronic instability has plagued Liberia. Peace was restored in late 2003 when warring factions signed a Comprehensive Peace Agreement, and in January 2006, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was inaugurated, marking the end of the transition to peace and the restoration of democratic self-rule. The DAI team worked with the new government to increase legitimacy, strengthen public sector management, and promote policy and institutional reforms. In addition, DAI built concrete and positive communication channels and relationships between the citizens and their state institutions.

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Liberia—Community Infrastructure Project II (LCIP I, II)

After the second civil war in Liberia ended, DAI was active in the country on behalf of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), supporting social reconciliation, community infrastructure reconstruction, economic development, and democratic governance and civil society strengthening. Building on this presence, DAI was awarded USAID’s Liberia Community Infrastructure Project II, which targeted vulnerable youths by combining literacy and numeracy training, enterprise development and agribusiness assistance, and key infrastructure projects that fostered economic growth for the nation.

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Liberia—Food and Enterprise Development Program (FED)

More than half of Liberians make their living through agriculture, yet agriculture is not seen as a business by most of the nation’s farmers. Taking an approach tailored to the specific conditions of the country and the various locations, FED is helping Liberia achieve food security—in terms of food availability, utilization, and affordability—by building indigenous incentive structures that assist a range of agricultural stakeholders to adopt a commercial approach.

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Liberia—Liberian Bank for Development and Investment (LBDI)

DAI assisted LBDI in expanding its business, particularly to the micro, small, and medium-sized enterprise (MSME) segment. The banking sector in Liberia is extremely small, comprising only a handful of operational banks. Ecobank and LBDI dominate the sector, but LBDI has the highest capacity to respond to many of the financial markets. 

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Libya—World Bank Needs and Security Assessment

The goal of this assessment is to update World Bank understanding in Libya, increase the specificity of its knowledge about critical institutions and themes, and broaden the base of Libyan sources for future use by the bank. 

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Macedonia—Make Decentralization Work Project (MDW)

Decentralization is an important component of lasting democratic development in countries such as Macedonia that are accustomed to a centralized autocracy. The MDW project increased the capacity of municipal governments to assume new powers under the decentralization that commenced in 2005. Most of the work was at the local level, including direct, small-group, and one-on-one technical advice.

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Macedonia—Municipal Management of Macedonian Schools Program (MMMS)

The Republic of Macedonia has made decentralization and the promotion of democratic local governance a principal part of its commitment to restore, revitalize, and expand democratic practices. The goal of MMMS was to provide technical assistance and training to local governments to improve their ability to undertake their new responsibilities in school management. 

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