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Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

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Presented at RENEWAL’s Satellite Session "Nutrition Security, Social Protection and HIV: Operationalizing Evidence for Programs in Africa" at the XVIII International AIDS Conference. By Scott Drimie
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Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact Scott Drimie International Food Policy Research Institute Regional Network on AIDS, Livelihoods and Food Security Nutrition Security, Social Protection and HIV: Operationalizing Evidence for Programs in Africa XVIII International AIDS Conference , Vienna 18 July 2010
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Page 1: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

Scott DrimieInternational Food Policy Research Institute

Regional Network on AIDS, Livelihoods and Food Security

Nutrition Security, Social Protection and HIV: Operationalizing Evidence for Programs in AfricaXVIII International AIDS Conference , Vienna

18 July 2010

Page 2: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

Objectives

• Focus on the challenge of translating this emerging evidence into large-scale action, and ultimately better impact.

• Discuss the pathways for policy influence when dealing with such complex interactions.

• Highlight some of the lessons from nine years of RENEWAL activity in eastern and southern Africa.

Page 3: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

Science – Policy Interface

• Interface not well understood, and is often assumed.

• At least three distinctive perspectives:

– a linear and logical approach; – an iterative and incremental approach; and– an approach centered more on discourse.

Page 4: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

Moving in the Divided Space

RENEWALImproved

Multi-Directional Dialogue

PolicyResearch

“Evidence”

Page 5: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

Malawi MOA Capacity Strengthening

HIV and Agriculture Task Force

MOA: Ext Services

NAC: 2008Irish Aid: 2009

Strategy – based on scientific evidence Capacity limitations

RENEWAL / BundaSADC VAC training on HIV/FS

Modules for MOAFAO Funding

ScienceSam Bota RENEWAL Malawi

Page 6: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

TB and HIV in Mbekweni, South Africa

ZAMBART Research Project

Community engagement Policy “dialogue” with NAC, DoH

RENEWAL National ForaMSc degrees, publications

Collaboration – build on strengths

Feedback Meeting:“march on the councilors”

Page 7: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

Working as a network: lessons

• The nature of politics and political engagement:

– peculiar politics of HIV&AIDS

– labyrinthine departmental politics

– focus on sustaining relationships

Page 8: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

Working as a network: lessons• The maintenance of integrity of interactive

research:

– adherence to principles of science whilst maintaining close relationships with those with political authority

– ensuring accountability to the communities within which the research is conducted.

– To “reach-in” to what individuals and organisations share rather than to focus on differences.

Page 9: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

Working as a network: lessons• Selecting and nurturing ‘champions’ in government

and scientific organisations:

– senior officials regularly move to new posts

– scientists have a ‘natural’ reticence against use of their research in different forms and ways

– Need to engage in critical commentary and interpretation with different ‘non-science’ parties

Page 10: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

New Ways of Working

• The “U-Process” in Mamelodi, South Africa:

– Urban-rural links research

• Urban epidemic• Urban informal settlements have double the HIV

prevalence of urban formal areas in South Africa• Risk factors (Weiser et al)• Mobility and spatial connections

Page 11: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

Sickness and HIV:if the individual in Johannesburg becomes too sick to work, the majority will return back home

Support

54 %

67%

Importance of

food Burden on the household back

home.

Urban livelihood that supports

another household ‘back home’ would

be affected.

Page 12: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

The “U-Process”: Phase 1“ Co-Sensing

Co-Presencing

Co-Realizing

Phase 1: Co-sensing “learning to see… the first schooling” –Nietzsche

Activities: foundation workshops, learning journeys.

Output: Documented shared understanding of reality.

Page 13: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

The “U-Process”: Phase 2“

Co-Sensing

Co-Presencing

Co-Realizing

Phase 2:

Co-presencing Retreat and Reflect

Getting in touch with own relationship to the system, ‘inner knowing about it.

Activities: Innovation retreat, Wilderness solos

Output:: Clarity and commitment about what to do to create new reality

Page 14: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

The “U-Process”: Phase 3“

Co-Sensing

Co-Presencing

Co-Realising

Phase 3: Co-realizing – bringing the new reality into existence

Activities: Implementation of innovations with potential to change the system, prototyping, piloting, learning by doing

Page 15: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

Working as a network• The seemingly interminably slow process of

influencing policy requires a long-term perspective:

– Need to be persistent, to adopt an informed, supportive, flexible and adaptive approach.

– gradual strengthening of networks allows trust to be built while securing diverse representatives as a key source of legitimacy and, hence, influence.

Page 16: Addressing HIV and nutrition linkages: from evidence to impact

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