BRAC states that it employs over 90,000 people, roughly 70 percent of whom are women, and that it reaches more than 126 million people with its services.[7][8][9] BRAC has operations in 12 countries of the world.[7][10]
History
Known formerly as the Bangladesh Rehabilitation Assistance Committee, then as the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee, and later as Building Resources Across Communities,[11] BRAC was initiated in 1972 by Sir Fazle Hasan Abed at Shallah Upazillah in the district of Sunamganj as a large scale relief and rehabilitation project to help returning war refugees after the Bangladesh Liberation War of 1971.[12] Fourteen thousand homes had to be rebuilt as part of the relief effort, as well as several hundred fishing boats; BRAC claims to have done this within nine months, as well as opening medical centres and providing other essential services.[13][non-primary source needed]
Until the mid-1970s, BRAC concentrated on community development through village development programmes that included agriculture, fisheries, cooperatives, rural crafts, adult literacy, health and family planning, vocational training for women and the construction of community centres. A Research and Evaluation Division (RED) was set up to evaluate its activities and decide direction, and in 1977, BRAC began taking a more targeted approach by creating Village Organisations (VO) to assist the landless, small farmers, artisans, and vulnerable women. That same year BRAC set up a commercial printing press to help finance its activities. The handicraft retail chain called Aarong was established the following year.[14]
In the late 1970s, diarrhoea was a leading cause of child mortality in Bangladesh.[15] In February 1979, BRAC began a field trial, in two villages of what was then Sulla thana, of a campaign to combat diarrhoea.[16] The following year they scaled up the operation and named it the Oral Therapy Extension Programme (OTEP).[17] It taught rural mothers in their homes how to prepare an oral rehydration solution (ORS) from readily available ingredients and how to use it to treat diarrhoea.[18] The training was reinforced with posters and radio and TV spots.[19]
The ten-year programme taught 12 million households spread over 75,000 villages in every part of Bangladesh except the Chittagong Hill Tracts (which were unsafe to work in because of civil unrest).[20] Fifteen years after they were taught, the vast majority of mothers could still prepare a safe and effective ORS.[21] The treatment was little known in Bangladesh when OTEP began,[22] but 15 years later it was used in rural households for severe diarrhoea more than 80% of the time, one of the highest rates in the world.[23]
In 1979, BRAC started a Rural Development Programme (RDP).[25] This was intended to give members access to credit and to savings facilities.[26] The programme involved considerable growth in the number of people who were members of BRAC: in 1989, three years after the start of the Rural Development Programme, there were 350,000 members, and by 1995 there were 1.2 to 1.5 million members.[27] An evaluation by the United Kingdom Department for International Development in 1998 found that the programme had been successful, though not all the aims were achieved.[26] BRAC's own evaluation in 1996 found "gradual improvements in the indicators such as wealth, revenue earning assets, the value of house structure, the level of cash earned, per capita expenditure on food, total household expenditure", but hoped-for improvements in village self-management had not taken place, and the drop-out rate of members was high.[26]
In 1991, the Women's Health Development programme commenced. The following year BRAC established a Centre for Development Management (CDM) in Rajendrapur.[citation needed]
BRAC opened an Information Technology Institute in 1999.[citation needed]
BRAC has done what few others have – they have achieved success on a massive scale, bringing life-saving health programs to millions of the world's poorest people. They remind us that even the most intractable health problems are solvable, and inspire us to match their success throughout the developing world.
Microfinance, introduced in 1974, is BRAC's oldest programme. It spans all districts of Bangladesh.[29][30] It provides collateral-free loans to mostly poor, landless, rural women, enabling them to generate income and improve their standards of living.[29][30] BRAC's microcredit program has funded over $1.9 billion in loans in its first 40 years.[citation needed] 95% of BRAC's microloan customers are women.[31] According to BRAC, the repayment rate is over 98%.[32] BRAC started a community empowerment programme back in 1988 all over the country.[citation needed]
BRAC founded its retail outlet, Aarong (Bengali for "village fair") in 1978 to market and distribute products made by indigenous peoples. Aarong services about 65,000 artisans, and sells gold and silver jewellery, handloom, leather crafts, etc.[14]
The Challenging the Frontiers of Poverty Reduction: Targeting the Ultra Poor (CFPR-TUP) project was initiated in 2002.[33] The ultra-poor are a group of people who eat below 80% of their energy requirements despite spending at least 80% of their income on food.[34] In Bangladesh, they constitute the poorest 17.5 per cent of the population.[35] These people suffer from chronic hunger and malnutrition, have inadequate shelter, are more prone to disease, are deprived of education and are more vulnerable to recurring natural disasters. The CFPR-TUP programme is aimed at households which are too poor to access the benefits from development interventions such as microfinance and assists them to access mainstream development services. The program costs around US$35 million a year.[36]
Education
BRAC is one of the largest NGOs involved in primary education in Bangladesh.[37] As of the end of 2012, it had more than 22,700 non-formal primary schools with a combined enrollment of 670,000 children.[32][non-primary source needed] Its schools constitute three-quarters of all NGO non-formal primary schools in the country.[37]
BRAC's education programme provides non-formal primary education to those left out of the formal education system, especially poor, rural, or disadvantaged children, and drop-outs.[31] Its schools are typically one room with one teacher and no more than 33 students. Core subjects include mathematics, social studies and English. The schools also offer extracurricular activities.[37] They incentivise schooling by providing food, allowing flexible learning hours, and conferring scholarships contingent on academic performance.[38]
Bangladesh has reduced the gap between male and female attendance in schools.[38] The improvement in female enrollment, which has largely been at the primary level, is in part attributable to BRAC.[37] Roughly 60% of the students in their schools are girls.[31]
BRAC also runs a university called BRAC University.[39]
Public health
BRAC started providing public healthcare in 1972 with an initial focus on curative care through paramedics and a self-financing health insurance scheme. The programme went on to offer integrated healthcare services.[citation needed]
BRAC's 2007 impact assessment of its North West Microfinance Expansion Project testified to increased awareness of legal issues, including those of marriage and divorce, among women participants in BRAC programs. Furthermore, women participants' self-confidence was boosted and the incidence of domestic violence was found to have declined.[40] One of the most prominent forms of violence against women, acid throwing, has been decreasing by 15-20% annually since the enactment in 2002 of legislation specifically targeting acid violence.[41]
Disaster relief
BRAC conducted one of the largest NGO responses to Cyclone Sidr which hit vast areas of the south-western coast of Bangladesh in mid-November 2007.[citation needed] BRAC distributed emergency relief materials, including food and clothing, to over 900,000 survivors, provided medical care to over 60,000 victims and secured safe supplies of drinking water. BRAC is now focusing on long-term rehabilitation, which will include agriculture support, infrastructure reconstruction and livelihood regeneration.[42][non-primary source needed]
BRAC is partly self-funded through a number of social enterprises. These include a retail fashion chain called Aarong that sells rural handicrafts, an agricultural seed business, a dairy, and a cold storage facility, among others. Between 2011 and 2015, surplus self-generated revenue from the organization's enterprises averaged $17 million annually.[45]
Historian Taj Hashmi has criticized BRAC's projects for exploiting the cheap labour of rural women and children. An embroidered saree retailed at Aarong for 6,000 Bangladeshi taka ($120 as of 2000), for example, earned the embroiderer only 300 taka (less than $7).[46]
^"BRAC in business". The Economist. 18 February 2010. Called BRAC, it is by most measures the largest, fastest-growing non-governmental organisation (NGO) in the world
^ShineTheme. "Where we work". BRAC. Archived from the original on 25 April 2019. Retrieved 6 February 2019.
^Chowdhury, A. Mushtaque R.; Cash, Richard A. (1996). A Simple Solution: Teaching Millions to Treat Diarrhoea at Home. Dhaka: University Press. p. 23. ISBN978-984-05-1341-3.
^ ab"BRAC at a Glance"(PDF). BRAC. December 2012. Archived(PDF) from the original on 10 November 2016. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
^Rakib Avi; Anika Noor (20 September 2015). "Hope Is The Word". The Daily Star. Archived from the original on 20 September 2015. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
^ ab"Gender Differences". Education in Bangladesh, a Dawson College term paper. Archived from the original on 24 August 2011. Retrieved 21 February 2012.
^"Brac University". www.bracu.ac.bd. Archived from the original on 1 November 2020. Retrieved 2 December 2020.
^MacMillan, Scott (2022). Hope over fate: Fazle Hasan Abed and the science of ending global poverty. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 135, 251. ISBN978-1-5381-6492-1.
^Hashmi, Taj I. (2000). Women and Islam in Bangladesh: beyond subjection and tyranny. Palgrave. p. 155. ISBN978-0-312-22219-2.
^"BRAC". BRAC Official Website. 13 January 2016. Archived from the original on 3 May 2020. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
Banu, Dilruba, Fehmin Farashuddin, Altaf Hossain, and Shahnuj Akter. "Empowering Women in Rural Bangladesh: Impact of Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee's Impact." (n.d.): n. pag. BRAC. Web.
Chowdhury, M. Jahangir Alam; Ghosh, Dipak; Wright, Robert E. (2005). "The impact of micro-credit on poverty: evidence from Bangladesh". Progress in Development Studies. 5 (4): 298–309. doi:10.1191/1464993405ps116oa. S2CID154925150.
Rohde, J. E. "BRAC- Learning To Reach Health For All." Bulletin Of The World Health Organization 84.8 (2006): 682–83. Web.
"World Winners From WISE." Education Journal 130 (2011): 32. Web.