Right2Grow Closeout | Wilmat Development Foundation
Closeout Celebrations · Right2Grow Uganda · 2021–2025

Five Years of Strengthening Communities,
Rooted in People-Led Advocacy

Wilmat Development Foundation reflects on a transformative journey as a sub-grantee and strategic capacity-strengthening partner in the Right2Grow Uganda Programme and what it means for communities beyond.

Bugweri & Mayuge District, Eastern Uganda Funded by the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs Lead Partners by The Hunger Project Uganda, Action Against Hunger Uganda and World Vision Uganda 2025 Programme Closeout
Every child has the right to grow — well-nourished, with clean water and with a community that advocates for their future.
— Right2Grow Programme Vision

As the Right2Grow Uganda Programme draws to a close after five remarkable years, Wilmat Development Foundation (WDF) stands proud among the network of civil society partners whose collective dedication has transformed how communities in Bugweri District — and across Uganda — understand, demand, and hold their leaders accountable for nutrition, food security, and Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH).

Launched in September 2021 at the Fairway Hotel in Kampala under the theme “Fostering a multisectoral involvement and investment in harnessing the growth of every child to reach their full potential,” Right2Grow Uganda was a strategic consortium of nine civil society organisations led by The Hunger Project Uganda and funded by the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Wilmat Development Foundation joined this consortium as a sub-grantee with a clear and specific mandate: to deepen grassroots engagement, build local institutional capacity, and amplify community voices in Bugweri District and the broader Busoga sub-region.


A Global Movement, A Local Heart

Right2Grow was a five-year Strategic Partnership programme operating simultaneously in six countries — Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Mali, South Sudan, and Uganda — all funded by the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The programme’s core belief was both bold and simple: sustainable progress against malnutrition and poor sanitation is only achievable when communities themselves are empowered to lead, advocate, and hold decision-makers accountable.

Globally, Right2Grow reached over 10 million people across its six countries of operation. It supported more than 47 civil society organisations in developing robust advocacy plans, adopting participatory budget monitoring tools, and mentoring over 1,000 community groups. In Uganda alone, the programme operated across 10 districts, drove the passage of Uganda’s landmark Food and Nutrition Bill, and catalysed measurable increases in district budget allocations for nutrition and WASH services.

10M+
People reached globally across 6 countries
10
Districts covered in Uganda alone
47+
CSOs developed advocacy plans globally
5
Years of transformative, community-led action

Strategic Capacity Strengthening at the Grassroots

As a sub-grantee under the Right2Grow Uganda Consortium, Wilmat Development Foundation served as the community-facing pillar of programme implementation in Mayuge district and Bugweri District — a young district in the Busoga sub-region of Eastern Uganda carved from Iganga in 2018, home to over 211,000 residents whose livelihoods depend primarily on small-scale agriculture.

Bugweri’s communities had long faced the twin burden of food insecurity and limited access to clean water and sanitation. WDF’s entry through Right2Grow was therefore both timely and strategic. From the outset, WDF positioned itself not merely as a programme implementer, but as a genuine enabler — building the knowledge, skills and institutional frameworks that communities needed to sustain change long after the programme ended.

WDF’s Strategic Mandate under Right2Grow

To strengthen the capacity of community-based organisations (CBOs), Village Health Teams (VHTs), women’s groups and sub-county leadership structures in Bugweri District to independently plan, advocate, monitor, and demand accountability for nutrition and WASH services — embedding a culture of evidence-based community advocacy from the ground up.

WDF’s work rested on several interconnected pillars of intervention that collectively created a strong foundation for community-led nutrition and WASH governance:

🌱

Community Mobilisation & Nutrition Advocacy

WDF trained and equipped community members — especially women and youth — to understand their right to nutrition and WASH services and to articulate these demands to sub-county and district authorities through structured CBO/CSO forums.

📊

Participatory Budget Monitoring

WDF facilitated communities in tracking and analysing local government budget allocations for nutrition and WASH services, enabling transparent dialogue with district authorities and demonstrable increases in sectoral budget lines.

💧

WASH Systems Strengthening

Through household mapping surveys and community-led campaigns, WDF addressed open defecation, hand hygiene promotion and sustainable water point maintenance — fundamental steps toward reducing child malnutrition in the district.

🏫

School Nutrition & Demonstration Gardens

WDF supported community advocacy that led to the establishment of demonstration gardens in primary schools in Bugweri District — a resolution passed at the District Council level through the CBO/CSO Forum that WDF helped establish and sustain.

👩‍💼

Women & Youth Leadership in Nutrition

Recognising that malnutrition disproportionately affects women and children, WDF embedded gender-sensitive approaches throughout its programming, elevating the voices of lactating mothers, pregnant women, and young girls in community decision-making processes.

🔗

Multi-level Policy Linkages

WDF connected community-level evidence and demands to district-level planning and national policy processes, contributing to Uganda’s broader policy gains including the advancement of the Food and Nutrition Bill through collaborative CSO advocacy networks.


What Five Years of Willingness Built

In Bugweri District, the Right2Grow programme — driven at the grassroots by WDF’s dedicated teams — catalysed a profound shift in how communities related to nutrition governance. Household mapping surveys conducted during the programme’s early phase revealed alarming rates of under-five malnutrition in the Busoga region. Rather than treating this as a static data point, WDF used these findings as an organising tool — turning community awareness of the problem into collective, sustained advocacy for solutions.

The District Nutrition Coordination Committee in Bugweri became more functional and representative as a direct result of WDF’s capacity-strengthening work. Community members who once had no platform to engage their local government on nutrition issues were now presenting evidence-based demands, attending planning meetings, and tracking whether commitments were being honoured. This was perhaps the most profound transformation of all: a shift from passive recipients of services to active architects of the systems that governed their lives.

Real change is not what happens when a programme is running — it is what communities continue to do when the programme has ended.

Community-based organisations in Bugweri were strengthened in planning, monitoring, reporting, and advocacy skills. Women’s savings and nutrition groups were linked to broader food security and WASH initiatives. School communities established sustainable gardens that became living classrooms for nutrition-sensitive agriculture. And above all, a generation of community leaders — women, men, and youth — emerged who understand that nutrition is not charity; it is a right they are empowered to demand.


From Launch to Legacy: A Timeline

September 2021

Right2Grow Uganda Officially Launched

Launched at Fairway Hotel, Kampala, with the Minister in Charge of General Duties officiating. Wilmat Development Foundation joins as a sub-grantee, beginning community engagement in Bugweri District.

2021–2022

Household Mapping & Community Mobilisation

WDF conducts household nutrition and WASH mapping in Bugweri. Alarming under-five malnutrition rates documented and used to mobilise communities, local governments, and advocacy networks.

2022–2023

CBO/CSO Forums Established & Budget Monitoring Begins

Community advocacy forums established in Bugweri Sub-counties. Participatory budget monitoring tools introduced; communities begin tracking district nutrition and WASH expenditures. District Council passes resolution for school demonstration gardens.

2023–2024

Policy Wins & National Engagement

Uganda drafts its Food and Nutrition Bill — a milestone WDF’s advocacy work contributed to. Budget allocations for nutrition and WASH services increase at sub-county and district levels in programme areas. WDF participates in national nutrition forums and accountability workshops.

2025

Programme Closeout — Legacy Takes Root

Right2Grow Uganda Programme concludes after five years. Systems, skills, and community structures built through WDF’s work in Bugweri endure as the foundation for continued, locally-led nutrition and WASH advocacy — the true measure of the programme’s success.


Beyond Right2Grow: WDF’s Continuing Commitment

The conclusion of a funded programme is never the conclusion of a mission. At Wilmat Development Foundation, Right2Grow has been a chapter — a critically important and deeply formative one — in a longer story of community transformation. The structures built, the skills transferred, and the advocacy capacity embedded in Bugweri’s communities will continue to function long after the programme has formally closed.

WDF is committed to sustaining the gains made through Right2Grow by continuing to support community nutrition advocacy networks in Bugweri and the wider Busoga region; by maintaining engagement with the District Nutrition Coordination Committee; and by integrating the participatory monitoring approaches introduced under Right2Grow into our broader programming framework. The programme taught us — and proved to the world — that when grassroots organisations are trusted, resourced, and connected to wider advocacy ecosystems, communities can and do drive their own transformation.

We extend our profound gratitude to The Hunger Project Uganda, the Right2Grow Global Consortium, the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and all consortium partners — Action Against Hunger, World Vision, Save the Children, CEGAA, and others — for their trust, collaboration, and unwavering commitment to a people-centred approach to development. We are equally grateful to the local government of Bugweri District, community leaders, Village Health Teams, women’s groups, and every individual who made the work real, meaningful, and lasting.

To the communities of Bugweri — your willingness to claim your rights, your voice, and your future is what made Right2Grow work. That is the most enduring legacy of all.

Continue the Journey

Willingness Matters — Always

Wilmat Development Foundation continues to champion community-led nutrition, WASH, livelihoods, and empowerment across Uganda. Learn more about our work and how to partner with us.

Visit wdfug.org