Montrer Le Chemin: Guide d'Entraînement des Femmes au Leadership (Leading to Choices French Edition)

Leading to Choices French Edition

Montrer le Chemin: Guide d'Entraînement des Femmes au Leadership (2002) (164 pages)
Leading to Choices French Edition 0-9710922-2-2 $24.95

Authors: Mahnaz Afkhami, Ann Eisenberg, and Haleh Vaziri
In consultation with: Suheir Azzouni, Ayesha Imam, Amina Lemrini, and Rabèa Naciri
Translated, adapted, and tested by: Association Démocratique des Femmes du Maroc (ADFM)
Edited by: Evelyne El Guedj

Order | Download (PDF, 0.5 MB)

The French edition of Leading to Choices (Montrer Le Chemin: Guide d'Entraînement des Femmes au Leadership) has been used to conduct leadership training workshops in Cameroon, Mauritania, Morocco, and Zimbabwe. Workshops are conducted throughout Morocco with development activists, women's rights advocates, literacy instructors, technicians, lawyers, and teachers. In Cameroon, workshop participants began mobilizing to establish a local radio station to broadcast programs that would address issues of importance to women in their community.In Mauritania, workshop participants in the remote Gorgol region have established a network of women's organizations.  In Zimbabwe, workshop participants organized reconciliation forums and established conflict resolution and peace training courses for victims of violence in the region. 

Montrer Le Chemin:Guide d'Entraînement des Femmes au Leadership (2002) (164 pages)
Leading to Choices French Edition 0-9710922-2-2 $24.95
Order | Download (PDF, 0.5 MB)

Stories from the field 

Leadership Workshops in Morocco and Nigeria Create Hope for Social Change

Moroccan Workshop ParticipantsApproximately 65 women, and some men participated in two leadership training workshops conducted by WLP's Moroccan partner, L'Association Démocratique des Femmes du Maroc (ADFM) in Taza and Ouarzazat between April and July 2004. The workshops were conducted using both the French and Maghreby-Arabic editions of the Leading to Choices leadership training manual.

In the remote northeastern town of Taza, twenty-five women and five men, participated in the training workshop, the majority of whom were representatives of organizations involved with economic development, social services, education, poverty eradication, women's rights advocacy, and improving women's health.

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