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| Country: | Uruguay |
| Region: | South America |
| Field Of Work: | Human Rights |
| Subsectors: | Gender Equity, Income Generation, Rural Development |
| Target Populations: | Communities, Women |
| Organization: | Asociación Nacional de Grupos de Mujeres Rurales |
| Year Elected: | 1997 |
In 1996, financing from the Ministry of Farming and Agriculture paid for a study to assess training options and identify which could be best adapted to the women's needs. This diagnostic phase also included a national meeting of some four hundred women at which a comprehensive needs assessment was carried out. This led to the development of "integral" training modules focusing on building sets of skills relevant to given areas of production. Between 1998 and 1999, thanks to a partnership with the Ministry of Labor, over three hundred fifty womenranging from ceramists to canners to weaverswere trained in areas such as production, marketing, and management. The association holds four commercial fairs per year where groups sell their products. It also facilitates partnerships between groups and commercial distributors.
In 1999, with support from the embassies of Canada and Great Britain, a US $20,000 revolving loan fund was set up to help seed new initiatives and grow existing ones. Some fifteen groups have benefited from the fund, with a repayment rate of nearly 100 percent. Rosario is now promoting the fund more broadly among the groups, and will explore the possibility of securing additional funding.
As word of the association's impact spreads throughout Uruguay, new groups are sprouting up and seeking admission. Steady support, financial and otherwise, from embassies, international organizations, local business, and local and federal government ensures the association's stability and future growth. In addition, because Rosario believes that the women must not take the association's value for granted, each group pays a small monthly "symbolic" support fee. Rosario now plans to focus on expanding the organization nationally, while exploring the possibility of spreading into neighboring Argentina and Brazil. She is also interested in establishing commercial ties with Mercosur exporters and creating a brand name for the association's products.
In the end, it was her agronomistrather than farmerhusband who took the family to live in the country. Rosario found the transition to rural living much more difficult than anticipated. She spent the first few years raising her young children and adjusting to the isolation of country life before starting her veterinary practice in 1986. Contact with rural families enabled her to see the vital role that women play in the stability of the rural family and the community as a whole. She saw that the women often lacked self-confidence and were treated in many cases with less appreciation than the farm animals. Determined to restore their self-esteem and to render visible their talents, Rosario began organizing small meetings where the women could share their experiences and gain strength from one another. Thanks to her vision and untiring leadership, these meetings have grown into a national movement.