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    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/saving-lives-oxfam-partners-take-center-stage">        <title>Saving lives: Oxfam partners take center stage</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/saving-lives-oxfam-partners-take-center-stage</link>        <description>Oxfam invests in the strengths of local communities and partners. When rainfall from a tropical
depression triggered a massive emergency in El Salvador, our approach was put to the test.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p>In El Salvador, the landscapes are stunningly beautiful. From the coastal plain, wide expanses of pasture and cropland reach to a distant skyline of volcanoes and jagged mountain ranges. But the natural forces at work here are powerful. Earthquakes are an ever-present danger; hurricanes sweep in from east and west; and even the volcanoes erupt from time to time. For those who can’t afford sturdy home on a safe piece of land, fear is a constant companion.</p>]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>mborum</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>El Salvador</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>disaster risk reduction</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>humanitarian relief</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hygiene</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>public health</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>water</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2012-04-23T18:35:26Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Oxfam Impact</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfamexchange-winter-2012">        <title>OXFAMExchange, Winter 2012</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfamexchange-winter-2012</link>        <description>What if development took the kind of time and commitment it takes to raise a child? (It does.)</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p>Oxfam's work is about structural change—a long, slow process. How slow? Well, we generally think about our field programs as approximately 15-year investments. In other words, a development program requires almost as much time and commitment as it takes to raise a child.</p>
<p>A shorter commitment won't get the job done. It takes time to help people build skills and infrastructure, to get policies changed, and to ensure that governments spend their money more effectively.</p>
<p>Smart development demands monitoring and evaluation. Organizations should be accountable to report not only what they do, but also how they measure it. Don't believe stories that guarantee long-term impact after one or two years' investment; that's barely time to lay some groundwork.</p>
<p>We all crave the easy answer, the quick solution, but if eradicating poverty were simple, people living in poverty would have sorted it out long ago. They may lack resources like land, but they certainly don't lack intelligence or insight. Poverty is a global challenge—one that we can overcome together, but listening and learning from people living in poverty, and developing solutions with them, takes time and sustained effort.</p>
<p>This issue of <i>OXFAMExchange</i> includes inspiring stories, but they are just snapshots from a family album: moments in a long journey together. Each story is ultimately about perseverance and the need for long-term commitment.</p>
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</div>]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Oxfam America</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Caribbean</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>East Africa</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>El Salvador</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Ethiopia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Haiti</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Horn of Africa</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>agriculture</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>aid reform</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>drought</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>farmers</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>humanitarian relief</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>livelihood</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>water</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2012-09-20T14:59:45Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Oxfam Exchange</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/multimedia/video/hardest-hit-survival-strategies-from-the-frontlines-of-climate-change">        <title>Hardest hit: Survival strategies from the frontlines of climate change</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/multimedia/video/hardest-hit-survival-strategies-from-the-frontlines-of-climate-change</link>        <description>Learn how four  communities around the world are fighting back against climate change, and how you can help.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<embed height="340" width="560" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://www.youtube.com/v/8gFVh__L1p4&amp;hl=en_US&amp;fs=1&amp;rel=0"></embed>]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>ldiolosa</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>East Asia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>El Salvador</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Ethiopia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Horn of Africa</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>US Gulf Coast Recovery</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>United States</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Vietnam</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>adaptation</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>disaster risk reduction</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>equality for women</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>women</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2011-06-01T01:30:24Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Video Link</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/multimedia/video/hardest-hit-el-salvador">        <title>Hardest hit: El Salvador</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/multimedia/video/hardest-hit-el-salvador</link>        <description>“Healthy wells,” tightly sealed to keep out contamination after floods, provide clean drinking and cooking water for families.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/txnCuUSt5L4&amp;hl=en_US&amp;fs=1&amp;rel=0" width="560" height="340" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed>]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>mborum</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>El Salvador</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>adaptation</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>climate change</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>disaster risk reduction</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hygiene</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>public health</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>water</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2010-05-25T17:51:55Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Video Link</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/holding-onto-the-mangroves">        <title>Holding onto the mangroves</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/holding-onto-the-mangroves</link>        <description>In some areas around Acajutla, El Salvador, mangrove forests have been severely reduced—replaced by fill and the simple homes of some of the country's poorest residents.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>We are sitting in a dusty park at the edge of an estuary in Barra de Santiago in the Ahuachapán Department of El Salvador. On the far side, a bank of mangroves marches into the water, and as the tide ebbs their roots, thin and dark, rise from the mud and crowd the shore. From a distance, they look like a wall that could stop anything.</p>
<p>We have been hearing a lot about the mangroves on this trip to the Pacific coast where countless families are struggling against a poverty that forces them to live where no one else will: in low-lying areas prone to flooding and along the sides of dirt roads that become hard to negotiate during heavy rains.</p>
<p>South of here, in a town called Metalío, we have just met with Francisco Calzadilla, a member of the technical team for Caritas, which, together with Oxfam America and three other donor groups, as well as six local non-governmental organizations, has joined a consortium called PRVAS—or Programa Reducción de Vulnerabilidades Ahuachapán-Sonsonate. One of its goals is to help communities carry out mitigation projects to reduce their risk in disasters. And that's where the mangroves come in.</p>
<p>"They serve as a natural barrier—to the waves and the wind off the ocean," says Calzadilla. "They also provide a food source. They serve as an ecosystem for shellfish."</p>
<p>The strip of mangroves Calzadilla is particularly concerned with, stretches for about 20 kilometers around Metalío. He estimates that about 50 percent of that stretch has been deforested as people cut down the trees for both construction material and firewood.</p>
<p>But in August, with support from PRVAS, community members took steps to recover some of those losses, said Calzadilla. They collected, sorted, and planted 20,000 mangrove seeds—they look like long, slender pods—along a two-kilometer deforested strip.</p>
<p>It will be a while—10 years predicted Calzadilla—before the seedlings mature enough to serve as a barrier against the onslaught of Mother Nature. In areas where the mangroves have disappeared and there is nothing to break the force of winds, small houses have blown away, Calzadilla said.</p>
<p>In some neighborhoods around Acajutla, El Salvador's largest port, mangrove forests have been severely reduced—replaced by fill and the simple homes of some of the country's poorest residents.</p>
<p>Further east in the department of Usulután, preservation efforts are underway for some of the mangrove forests in Jiquilisco Bay, where Oxfam America is helping local fishermen organize themselves to improve their production and protect their livelihoods. They depend on the resources that flourish in the dense tangle of roots, mud, and tidal water.</p>
<p>Deep in the pre-dawn gloom of one protected area in the bay, we can just make out a platform where watchmen keep round-the-clock guard over this watery haven supported by funds from the United Nations. Here, mollusks can get a solid start and help to increase the catch that local fishermen need to feed their families.</p>
<p>Later, after the sun is up and the tide has receded, the mangrove forests in Jiquilisco Bay come alive with the chirping and scrambling of wildlife. Herons pick their way over the mud flats. A raccoon darts through the exposed roots. A vulture studies us from his perch on a branch.</p>
<p>Juan Larín Rojas, a 54-year-old fisherman, eyes each one of them with delight. He knows many of their scientific names. This is his turf, and despite the challenges of making a living from these mangroves and the sea around them, he wouldn't give up this life for anything.</p>
<p>"I love fishing. I love the sea. I love feeling free," he says.</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Coco McCabe</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>El Salvador</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>climate change</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>environment</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>water</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2009-04-20T21:50:51Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/along-the-coast-of-el-salvador-families-take-steps-to-cope-with-climate-change">        <title>Along the coast of El Salvador, families take steps to cope with climate change</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/along-the-coast-of-el-salvador-families-take-steps-to-cope-with-climate-change</link>        <description>Oxfam and other aid groups is working with local activists to bring issues to the attention of the Salvadoran government. </description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>At the back of a brick building in a poor neighborhood of Acajutla—El Salvador's largest and oldest port—you can just make out the foundation of Marlene Canjura's former home. It was a small, metal-walled shack with a dirt floor and no toilet on the premises. During floods—and they come at least once a year here—water would rise as high as her thighs, stagnating inside for three days, and soaking the already-rotted frame that barely held the house up.</p>
<p>The house is gone now, and Canjura, her husband, and their four boys have moved to a new cinder block house—with a tile floor and a composting latrine—built by an aid group a short distance away. But for many poor people settled in this mangrove swamp, all the problems remain of living on marginal land, made more hazardous by the increased flooding climate change seems to be triggering.</p>
<p>And that's why Canjura, with the help of Oxfam America and a consortium of aid groups, is now rallying with other local activists to bring their problems to the attention of the Salvadoran government and push for help.</p>
<p>The consortium, made up of five donor groups and six local non-governmental organizations, started two years ago with a program called PRVAS—or Programa Reducción de Vulnerabilidades Ahuachapán-Sonsonate. The program helps communities in the area organize themselves to better prepare for disasters, carry out small mitigation projects, and win the ear of local governments. The idea behind the PRVAS is to help people help themselves—and find ways to make a new civil protection law, passed in 2005, work for them.</p>
<p>"If we just continue from an emergency response perspective, all we'll do year after year is help rescue people," says Henry Giovani Magaña the coordinator for PRVAS. "We won't help people overcome their vulnerabilities—which is what we want."</p>
<h3>The landless settle</h3>
<p>We are sitting in a small community center, a low-slung ocean-front structure on loan to residents in this coastal region from a Salvadoran living in the US. Other buildings—some less substantial than this one—line both sides of the street. And further back, amid pools of murky water, stretch what's left of the mangroves in this area. The construction of a railroad down to the coast in the 1930s marked the beginning of their end.</p>
<p>Magaña explains that when the railroad came, landless families, in search of jobs and a place to live, settled here, and slowly the swampland began to get developed. Nearby, the Sensunapan River, now reportedly one of the most polluted in this tiny country, drains into the sea, its water silted and brown. The river serves as both a source of income—shirtless diggers scoop boatloads of sand from its floor—and dread: During heavy rains, the Sensunapan spills from its channel and floods the surrounding homes.</p>
<p>Though fill and levees have altered the landscape in these coastal neighborhoods, the basic topography has not changed—with consequences that have proved dire in the decades since for poor people clinging to this strip of land along the Pacific.</p>
<p>"Nature doesn't make mistakes," says Magaña. "It wants this to be wet. There are floods here all the time."</p>
<p>And now, compounding the trouble, are changing weather patterns that are making life even more challenging for the families struggling here.</p>
<h3>Changes over time</h3>
<p>"About five years ago we started to notice that the sea is coming in further, and when there are very high tides it's slowly eroding houses along the shore," says Hilton Alcir Aguilar, a volunteer coordinator for the five coastal neighborhoods participating in the PRVAS program in Acajutla. "And the rains are heavier. Before, it would take two hours of rain for water to rise high enough to flood. Now, it happens in one hour."</p>
<p>Canjura has spent all of her 30 years right here in the La Playa neighborhood. And in that time she has begun to see changes that are having serious implications for her family.</p>
<p>"When we have these temporales—the storms that rain for several days—the water rises. But with climate change, we're seeing more flooding and we're also seeing it in areas that didn't flood before," she says. "Here most of the men are fishermen and they used to be able to haul in a lot but because of climate change, the fish seemed to have migrated away from here. It's really affected their ability to support their families. Some are looking for work as bricklayers. Some have opened bike repair shops. And some continue to fish."</p>
<p>Her husband is one of those—a fisherman.</p>
<p>"It has affected us," says Canjura. "He's getting less fish. If we used to eat two tortillas at a meal, now we're eating one." Sometimes, she says, her children go hungry.</p>
<h3>Searching for solutions</h3>
<p>"When you talk to people about climate change here, they're much more concerned," said Magaña. "They know storms are going to get worse, and if they're already living in vulnerable positions, it will make them more vulnerable."</p>
<p>What are the answers?</p>
<p>One solution, says Canjura, is the construction of a levee system on the Sensunapan River that would protect the densely populated community along one of its banks. But the price tag is steep, and no one has agreed to fund it, she adds. Nevertheless, other smaller projects proposed by locals and supported by PRVAS members are now moving ahead.</p>
<p>"We're trying to organize community councils so we can put together project proposals and seek support," says Canjura. She points to the recent construction of a seawall in La Playa as proof of what's possible when enough people get behind an idea. Designed to keep high tides from slopping onto the coastal road and into the homes of people along it, the seawall was built with help from Caritas, the mayor's office, and plenty of manual labor provided by the community.</p>
<p>"All of us felt very proud," says Canjura. "We were very happy we were able to achieve that."</p>
<p>Other projects in the works include the paving of a dirt evacuation route in the community of El Milagro. All it takes is two hours of heavy rain before the neighborhood floods with water up to people's knees, says José Vidal Aguillón, chairman of a local community council. A paved evacuation route will allow them to get out fast—without vehicles getting stuck in the mud. A broad drainage ditch, also under construction, will help the floodwaters to drain away more quickly—and prevent possible contaminants in the water from lingering.</p>
<h3>Looking ahead</h3>
<p>But construction projects aren't all that's needed to help poor people in coastal Acajutla weather the increasing challenges they face. They need a voice and they need influence—both of which PRVAS is slowly helping them muster.</p>
<p>"From the training in disaster risk reduction we've gone through with the PRVAS program, we've built our skills to advocate for greater aid from the government—and we're also getting more involved in working with the government," says Aguilar, the community coordinator. "The biggest achievement is the unity in the five communities—that we're united behind the same goal—and the influence we're starting to have in different government institutions."</p>
<p>With that influence, perhaps the communities will be able to lobby successfully for more opportunities for advanced schooling or vocational training in Acajutla—both critical if people are to become competitive in the job market. With fishing drying up, many of the Acajutla's breadwinners are going to have to find other means of making a living.</p>
<p>Canjura seems to be keenly aware of that. She has only a sixth-grade education, and her husband stopped his schooling after the third grade. But all four of their children are steadily moving up through the grades, even as finding the resources to buy the necessary school supplies is a constant worry for Canjura and her husband. Their oldest son will soon be entering eighth grade.</p>
<p>Would she like to see them go on to high school?</p>
<p>Canjura sighs deeply at the question, and is silent for a moment.</p>
<p>"That's my goal," she says finally. "I really want them to get ahead. But the way things are now, it's pretty hard."</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Coco McCabe</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>El Salvador</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>climate change</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>water</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2010-07-20T17:20:05Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/improving-the-wells-improves-community-in-flood-prone-parts-of-el-salvador">        <title>Improving the wells improves community health in flood-prone parts of El Salvador</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/improving-the-wells-improves-community-in-flood-prone-parts-of-el-salvador</link>        <description>Capped wells lined with a volcanic-rock filter provide families in Salvadoran communities with clean  drinking water.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>Standing  at the bottom of a narrow shaft of dirt and stones so deep it felt as though there was hardly air enough to breath, Florentino Diaz Cruz knew  better than most people the value of water: He was tunneling for it, one of a crew of 16 men and women enlisted to dig a well so that students in this rural region of El Salvador would have a source of drinking water during their school day.</p>
<p>That was 15 years ago. Today, clean water in the small communities of El Recuerdo  and Agua Zarca is as precious as ever—and still hard to get. There's no turning on the tap over a kitchen sink and letting the gallons gush.  Here, many people trudge to a communal source, fill their jugs, and lug the heavy load home again. But seasonal flooding—sometimes hugely destructive and, with climate change, possibly becoming more severe—contaminates many of the area's hand-dug wells, exposing people to waterborne illnesses.</p>
<p>But now, with the help of Oxfam America and its local partner, PROVIDA, the well that Cruz worked so hard to dig on the school grounds in El Recuerdo is pumping enough clean water to satisfy the drinking needs not only of the students but of about 80 families in the surrounding area. The well is one of five "healthy wells" in southern Zacatecoluca province PROVIDA lined, surrounded with a filter, capped to ensure its cleanliness, and outfitted with a pump that sends water to a large tank for chlorination and storage.</p>
<p>"The families in this area are living in extreme poverty, living as subsistence farmers or low paid day laborers in the nearby sugar cane plantations," says Karina Copen, an Oxfam humanitarian program officer. "They face numerous challenges in having to adapt to the increased frequency and intensity of the flooding in their area. With access to a healthy well, they can at least know that in the next flood, they will have a safe source of water for their families and the good health that comes along with it."</p>
<h3>'Families are healthier'</h3>
<p>Adaptations, such as these healthy wells, are essential for Salvadoran families living in the department of La Paz in the lower region of the Lempa River where seasonal rains, tropical depressions, and hurricanes,  make it one of the country's most flood-prone areas.</p>
<p>Coupled with those natural hazards is the fact that communities in the region have significantly less access to improved water sources and sanitation than other parts of the country. The "healthy wells" along with 27 new composting latrines have been a boon to families in the area.</p>
<p>"Kids are getting sick less; families are healthier," says Santos Efrain Coto, one of the local leaders in El Recuerdo. "When they drank contaminated water they got diarrhea and parasites."</p>
<p>The improved wells are based on a model that's new to El Salvador and designed by an organization called Swiss Labour Assistance. Besides having their tops sealed with cement to prevent polluted flood waters from slopping in, the wells are lined with a type of plastic pipe, known as polyvinyl chloride, or PVC, that extends down into the aquifer. Packed around the outside of the lining is a filter of volcanic rock that prevents contamination from seeping through underground.</p>
<p>At the El Recuerdo school one day recently, teacher Ana Elsa Cubias describes how students used to bring their own water from home to drink during the school day. Now, the refurbished well guarantees them a clean supply right on the spot.</p>
<p>"They're drinking water from a protected source and the kids have water right in the classroom," says Cubias.</p>
<p>A short distance from the classrooms sits a large plastic tank, sky blue and able to hold 1,100 liters of water pumped fresh from the well. Chlorinated, the water from the tank flows to two taps standing just outside the gates to the school. They're accessible to whoever is driving or walking by. And to ensure the stored water stays safe for drinking, the water committee arranges to have the tank cleaned every couple of weeks—a task that falls to a child small enough to wiggle inside and scrub the interior walls with a brush and bleach.</p>
<p>"We make sure he bathes before he gets in the tank," adds Coto, the local leader.</p>
<h3>Flooding in Agua Zarca</h3>
<p>In Agua Zarca, a few communities over, Jose Luis Funes Cruze says that before PROVIDA and Oxfam installed the new well, most of the local residents depended on their own backyard wells for drinking water—and that was a problem.</p>
<p>"The household wells take on a lot of rain water and a lot of filthy water when there's flooding," says Cruz, pointing in the direction of the polluted San Antonio River, which spills its banks during big storms. "The things people throw in—there are pigs up river. And the cheese factory is up river."</p>
<p>In the past, when their drinking supply has been contaminated, families in Agua Zarca have had to rely on the government or aid groups to truck in drinking water for them.</p>
<p>But now, with a new communal well their supply of drinking water is much improved.</p>
<p>"We're very grateful—the whole community is—to have that water," says Blanca Lidia Jiménez, who lives close to the well makes about six trips a day to fetch enough water for the seven people in her house. "We don't get sick so much when we drink the water from this well. The little kids would get swollen bellies, but with the new well that problem has been solved."</p>
<h3>The challenge of clean water</h3>
<p>Still, the situation in Agua Zarca points to the challenges of providing clean water in this area. The community's new well was built on the only land available: next to a cow pasture—an arrangement that could be problematic during the wet season when rain sloshes manure about and allows it to seep into the groundwater.</p>
<p>The deep plastic lining on the well and its volcanic-rock filter help, though, says Guillermo Morán, a professor and researcher at the University of El Salvador's Earth Sciences Institute. He worked with Oxfam America and another of its partners, the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative (HHI), to evaluate the effectiveness of the wells while studying the health practices of families who use them.</p>
<p>The study is an important component of Oxfam's public health work: It promotes accountability and offers a different model for aid groups by linking their work with that of universities.</p>
<p>"We have the field experience and they have the technical expertise," says Miriam Aschkenasy, Oxfam America's public health specialist. "Together we're able to evaluate programs at a higher standard and at one that increases accountability."</p>
<h3>What did the study find?</h3>
<p>In its draft report, HHI said that individuals who live in communities with "healthy wells"  were less likely to have diarrhea and reported fewer cases of the illness during the time of the study. But the draft report also revealed that in two of those communities, some people were still using hand-dug wells for their drinking water  while other people from places without "healthy wells" were making the trek to a community that had one to fetch their water.</p>
<p>"The study gives us insight in a way we couldn't have anticipated," says Aschkenasy. "It gives us an idea of where to focus in the future. We now know we need to find a way to encourage people who are still relying on the hand-dug wells to use the healthy ones instead. And it gives us great incentive to build more of them."</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Coco McCabe</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>El Salvador</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>climate change</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>disaster risk reduction</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>public health</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>water</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2010-07-20T17:21:27Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfam-impact-april-2008">        <title>Oxfam Impact April 2008</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfam-impact-april-2008</link>        <description>Where the ground remembers the rain</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>For poor communities in Zacatecoluca, El Salvador, a severe tropical storm in 2007 brought floods and contaminated drinking water. Now, thanks to disaster risk reduction work by Oxfam America and partner organizations, people in this region are better able to weather the storms.</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>mborum</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>El Salvador</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>humanitarian relief</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>natural disaster</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>water</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2009-03-25T20:26:15Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Oxfam Impact</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfam-in-central-america-mexico-and-the-caribbean">        <title>Oxfam in Central America, Mexico, and the Caribbean</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfam-in-central-america-mexico-and-the-caribbean</link>        <description>All across this diverse and beautiful territory, new faces of leadership are emerging. Women, rural communities, and small farmers are adding their voices to the political dialogue, calling on their governments: Hear us now.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>Half the population of Central America lives in poverty. The chronically poor—women, small farmers, and those in rural communities—lack the access to government services, economic opportunity, and basic rights that could enable a secure existence. Since the 1980s, Oxfam America has supported promising community-driven organizations, helping their leaders and members develop skills and resources—and a voice to achieve their visions for a fairer, more prosperous future for all.</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Oxfam America</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>community finance</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>coffee</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>oil, gas and mining</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Caribbean</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>aid reform</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Cuba</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>climate change</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>HIV-AIDS</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>water</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>trade</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Mexico</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>El Salvador</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Guatemala</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>natural resources</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>disaster risk reduction</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Honduras</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Haiti</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Nicaragua</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>equality for women</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2009-06-24T19:40:06Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Brochure</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/spring-2002">        <title>OXFAMExchange Spring 2002</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/spring-2002</link>        <description>Oxfam launches the Make Trade Fair campaign</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>On April 11, in a noise heard far beyond the borders of the Hong Kong harbor, Oxfam crushed a shipping container emblazoned with various trade injustices that Oxfam is fighting to abolish.</p>
<p>Amid cheers from a throng of enthusiastic supporters and international media, Make Trade Fair won the day.</p>
<p>Oxfam's trade campaign was launched.</p>
<p>Within hours of the Hong Kong debut, events were held in 25 cities including Brussels, Dublin, Geneva, Mexico City, San Salvador, and Washington, D.C. These events ranged from press conferences and symposiums to a rock concert in London’s Trafalgar Square.</p>
<p>Oxfam's trade campaign seeks to unite concerned citizens around the world in calling for fair trade policies that will help move millions of people out of poverty.</p>
<p>Nobel Prize Professor Amartya Sen, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, and musician and social activist Bono were among those who endorsed the campaign. "Oxfam has got it right," said Bono. "It wouldn't cost much to change the rules of trade so that poor countries can work their way out of poverty. But the world's leaders won't act unless they hear enough people telling them."</p>
<p>Also in this issue of EXCHANGE, writers Frances and Anna Lappé discuss their book <em>Hope's Edge: The Next Diet for a Small Planet</em>, and we bring you updates on Oxfam's work with water and sanitation, drought in Ethiopia, and indigenous women in the highlands of Peru who are speaking out after decades of violence.</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>mborum</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>CHANGE</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Cambodia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>East Asia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>El Salvador</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Peru</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>South America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Southern Africa</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>equality for women</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>indigenous people</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>minority rights</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>natural disaster</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>public health</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>trade</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>water</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2009-04-30T21:11:13Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Oxfam Exchange</dc:type>    </item>



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