MENU

About the Organization

The Institute for Development Studies and Practices (IDSP) is a Pakistani national institution that offers open learning spaces to nurture and develop individuals and communities. IDSP aims to change power structures by demystifying education and development, and generating value-based partnerships and practices at all levels. The purpose of IDSP’s interventions are to reduce and eventually end the exclusion of the majority of young people from mainstream education and livelihood opportunities in Pakistan. More than 60 percent of Pakistan’s population is between 15 and 35 years of age, and almost 80 percent of them are excluded from meaningful education and livelihood opportunities. IDSP opens learning spaces for this population, to empower them to respond to the challenges of education, livelihood, peace, and pluralism.

https://staging.skoll.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/idsp-sl1.jpg

In Balochistan, Pakistan’s poorest province, 98 percent of students do not complete primary school. IDSP offers basic education, and training in literacy, human rights, and community organizing.

https://staging.skoll.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/idsp-sl3.jpg

Quratul Ain Bakhteari aims to help young Pakistanis become educated, contribute to their communities, and live a purposeful life.

Ambition for Change

Develop a cadre of effective development thinkers, planners, and practitioners at the grassroots level, who will launch organizations and enterprises, or pursue careers in government and civil society, achieving real development in Pakistan.

Path to Scale

Collective Impact of Graduates Graduates organize communities, manage development projects, and mentor new students.

Skoll Awardee

Quratul Ain Bakhteari grew up in a refugee camp on the outskirts of Karachi after the creation of Pakistan in 1947. She earned a bachelor’s degree and worked providing basic health care and education to refugees from Bangladesh. Later, she earned a master’s degree and Ph.D. and established 2,000 government girls’ primary schools in rural Balochistan, resulting in the enrollment of 200,000 girls—a record in Pakistan’s history. Frustrated with a lack of efficacy in internationally sponsored development projects, she developed the blueprint for Institute for Development Studies and Practices and launched it in 1999 with support from The Asia Foundation. IDSP offers basic education and training in literacy, human rights, and community organizing.

Impact & Accomplishments
  • The number of graduates has reached 7,500 with 14,000 students engaged since 2013 to 2019
  • IDSP graduates have formed numerous community-based groups, entered government service, won seats in local elections, and formed village-level community boards.
  • 12 IDSP Senior Fellows (six women) from Balochistan, who had no prior education or experience in development, went on after graduating from IDSP to design, implement, and manage development projects, established five production houses, ranging in size from $50,000 to $1.50 million.
In the News
Related Content

Missing Puzzle Pieces: How Structures of Patriarchy and Notions of Motherhood Shaped My Social Change Work

One of my first childhood memories is of a never-ending sea of small yellow rooms, sprawling across a desert with not a single tree. Many people wore the same kind…

See All Awardees