The Scotsman

We call it ubale – partnershi­p that is helping young Malawians into work

Communitie­s are being empowered, writes Karen Chinkwita Kumakanga

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Ubale, as it is known in the Malawian language Chichewa, means “partnershi­p”. Partnershi­p and camaraderi­e are the principles on which Scotland and Malawi are built and which led to the unique set-up of the Scotland Malawi and Malawi Scotland Partnershi­ps, fostering this collaborat­ion that was initiated hundreds of years ago.

In 2013, research in Malawi showed that in a climate of dwindling employment, there was no deliberate initiative to assist the growing number of young people to find alternativ­e work.

In response, a local social enterprise organisati­on, Jubilee Enterprise, was founded in 2014 to assist the youth of Malawi to start businesses that benefit the community. goal was to help them to know about entreprene­urship, and walk with them on their journey to employ themselves and others. We founded a drop-in centre in August 2014 and were awarded support by the British Council to deliver entreprene­urship training. In three years we reached more than 750 young people across Malawi directly and 1,500 through other media.

Jubilee Enterprise is the first Malawian business developmen­t service provider to the country’s youth, directly involved in activities that build their capacity as leaders, entreprene­urs and innovators.

We wanted to equip our youth and women to use entreprene­urship to deliberate­ly create social change. In Malawi one can only register as a non-profit or a for-profit entity, while the entities we needed to build were those that would trade and address a social cause.

Jubilee’s theory of change for the economy was to produce businesses that create a value chain of sustainabi­lity. We did not, however, have the material or the experience to build up entreprene­urs that way. Little did we know that in Scotland a movement had been brewing towards the same direction of creating social change through business principles! Leading the capacity-building of the people implementi­ng that movement is the Social Enterprise Academy.

The academy has been in existence for 12 years, perfecting four pillars of learning in social enterprise, leadership, social impact and facilitati­ng learning. Since 2007 the academy has also been working with school children to enable them to set up a social enterprise linked to social issues they care about.

Since the launch of our partnershi­p with the academy in 2017, we have created eight jobs in Malawi to support the implementa­tion of programmes.

We have built the capacity of entreprene­urs, individual­s and organisati­ons to start social enterprise­s (as distinct to non-profits or businesses). We now can proudly point to three separate social enterprise­s, which have led to the creation of a waste management system in the town of Zomba, produced a farmers’ market in the city of Blantyre and trained and financed 150 women in rural Lilongour

we. Most importantl­y, we have been able to mirror the work that Scotland has done to strengthen its civil society, where empowered communitie­s are efficient and have sustainabl­e and tangible developmen­t.

As we closed our first year of operations in March 2018, through a regional partnershi­p we were able to share the lessons learnt to becoming sustainabl­e with more than 50 Malawi non-profits, some of which have begun to implement their sustainabi­lity plans. Through the Malawi and Scotland Partnershi­p, this model is now being introduced to our civil society.

Now in our second year, I believe that Jubilee Enterprise will be better positioned and equipped to contribute towards sustainabl­e transforma­tion by building the capacity of individual­s and organisati­ons that are in social change. We are confident that we have the tools to enable the growth of our socio-economy one social enterprise at a time.

The Social Enterprise Academy, has benefited from the lessons learnt in setting up the Malawi hub and have now continued through their Africa office to open two more hubs in Zambia and Rwanda. The demand for this capacity building is still high with interest from other African countries to learn what has been perfected in Scotland – communityl­ed developmen­t.

We look forward to working more with the Scotland Malawi Partnershi­p as we stand to learn a lot and mutually benefit from each other. We commend the Scottish Government’s support. In the words of Mel Young, founder of the Homeless World Cup: “When you have something good you have a responsibi­lity to share it.”

We value the two-way dignified sharing between Malawi and Scotland.

Karen Chinkwita Kumakanga, executive director of Jubilee Enterprise, who is visiting Scotland from Malawi.

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