Author: admin

  •  Migrants are not just moving — they’re building, contributing, and strengthening our communities. 

     Migrants are not just moving — they’re building, contributing, and strengthening our communities. 

    Whether it’s through hard work, creativity, or sharing knowledge, migrants play a vital role in making our societies more dynamic, inclusive, and prosperous. 

    Here are the Top 5 ways migrants help local communities thrive:

    ✅ Filling labor gaps in healthcare, agriculture, and essential services 
    ✅ Creating jobs by launching small businesses and boosting the local economy 
    ✅ Revitalizing towns and cities by reversing population decline and increasing school enrollment 
    ✅ Enriching our cultural landscape with diverse traditions, cuisines, and languages 
    ✅ Sharing skills and innovation, especially in science, tech, and education 

    When we support migrants, we invest in stronger, more resilient communities for all. 
    Let’s celebrate diversity and recognize the value of every person, no matter where they come from. 

     ‍  Let’s continue to stand up for inclusion, equality, and opportunity. 

      Share this to spread awareness and spark change!

  • Moving to a new country is tough — but no one should do it alone.

    Moving to a new country is tough — but no one should do it alone.

    At PROSDOMA, we stand with newcomers in Alberta, offering personalized support through every step of their journey — from navigating asylum processes to learning basic computer skills.

    Here are 5 common struggles newcomers face — and how our team helps them overcome each one. 

    We believe in inclusion, empowerment, and sustainability. Whether it’s assisting with permanent residency or linking individuals to food banks, PROSDOMA is here to help every newcomer thrive. 

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  • Canada+Cameroon: One Mission

    Canada+Cameroon: One Mission

    From helping newcomers settle into life in Alberta to training farmers in sustainable practices in rural Cameroon, PROSDOMA is building bridges that empower lives across continents.

    Whether it is planting trees , providing food security or connecting families to shelters and jobs, we believe in a future where everyone thrives.

    Join us in creating a sustainable future together.

    #PROSDOMA#MigrationSupport#SustainableDevelopment#CanadaCameroon

  • CLimate action: A Key to Sustainable Development

    CLimate action: A Key to Sustainable Development

    Did you know that climate action is not only about reducing carbon emissions but also about strengthening communities and improving lives? Climate change affects every aspect of our lives, and achieving Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 13—Climate Action—is crucial for a healthier, more sustainable world. 

    Here’s why climate action matters:

    1. Climate change affects everyone, especially marginalized communities. SDG13 calls for urgent global efforts to combat the impacts of climate change and create a climate-resilient world for all.

    2. Climate action doesn’t stand alone. It impacts other SDGs like poverty reduction (SDG1), food security (SDG2), and health (SDG3). By integrating climate action with these goals, we can create a more sustainable, resilient future for all.

    3. To make a real difference, we must empower communities to make informed decisions, reduce risks, and adapt to climate change. Together, we can build strong, climate-resilient communities that thrive amidst challenges.

    At PROSDOMA, we are committed to advancing climate awareness and sustainability. By helping newcomers settle in Alberta and advocating for sustainable farming practices in Africa, we’re not just supporting individuals—we’re contributing to a healthier planet. 

    Join us in taking action for a sustainable future! Whether it’s reducing your carbon footprint, supporting climate policies, or engaging in local sustainability efforts, every step counts. 

    Together, we can create a world that is both socially and environmentally sustainable.

    Source: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-47746-w

    #ClimateAction #SustainableDevelopment #SDG13 #EnvironmentalSustainability #ClimateJustice #GreenFuture #RenewableEnergy #ClimateResilience #GlobalGoals #ProsdomaImpact

    AC

  • Shrink your Carbon footprint-One step at a time.

    Shrink your Carbon footprint-One step at a time.

    Did you know?

    Canada has one of the highest carbon footprints per person in the world — at 15.5 tonnes annually, it’s over double the average in Europe, and three times the global average. In 2023, Canadians had the 2nd highest CO₂ emissions per person among all G20 countries.

      The good news: Every action counts. Whether you’re biking to work or choosing eco-conscious brands, small lifestyle changes can reduce your environmental impact and move us toward a more sustainable future.

    Here’s how you can help:

    ✅ Support sustainable businesses

    ✅ Walk, bike, or use public transit

    ✅ Turn down the heating by just 1°

    Alberta is working toward carbon neutrality by 2050, investing in innovation and helping industries cut emissions — and we all have a part to play.

      Learn more and join us: prosdoma.org

      Sources: alberta.ca, CTV News, Emission Index, Statista

    #CarbonFootprint #ClimateAction #Sustainablility #PROSDOMA #CarbonNeutral2050

    SH

  • PROSDOMA SOCIAL MEDIA

    PROSDOMA SOCIAL MEDIA

    Tree Planting Isn’t Always Climate Action — Unless We Do It Right

    Planting trees is often praised as a natural climate solution. But without strategy, science, and sustainability, it can fail — or even backfire.

    Recent research shows that while afforestation and reforestation can remove up to 3.6 gigatons of CO₂ per year, poorly managed projects risk reversing their impact through wildfires, droughts, and premature harvesting (Osman et al., 2023).

    4 key insights you need to know:

    1️⃣ Carbon storage is fragile:

    Unlike underground storage, forest carbon is vulnerable to both natural and human threats. Long-term permanence requires protection and monitoring.

    2️⃣ Location matters:

    Tree planting in high-latitude regions may increase local warming due to lower albedo. Tropical regions offer greater CO₂ removal potential — if land use is managed equitably.

    3️⃣ Biochar and  bioenergy with carbon capture and storage offer upgrades:

    By integrating forestation with biochar production or bioenergy with carbon capture and storage(BECCS), we can lock carbon away for centuries — far beyond a tree’s lifespan.

    4️⃣ Land must serve people too:

    Tree planting should never displace food systems or local communities. Sustainable land use must balance carbon goals with human needs.

    At PROSDOMA, we combine reforestation with community equity. Whether planting trees in Cameroon or educating migrants in Canada about climate resilience, we know real solutions root deeply in justice.

    Join us: prosdoma.org

    by E.D.

    Source: Osman, A. I., Fawzy, S., Lichtfouse, E., & Rooney, D. W. (2023). Planting trees to combat global warming. Environmental Chemistry Letters, 21, 3041–3044. https://lnkd.in/dY_uh3UQ

    What Makes Healthcare Truly Sustainable? 5 Evidence-Based Priorities

    In healthcare, sustainability isn’t just about keeping a project running — it’s about preserving impact where it matters most: patients, professionals, and systems.

    Yet according to Lennox et al. (2018), many improvement initiatives in healthcare settings collapse over time, wasting precious time, money, and trust.

    So, how do we build healthcare improvements that endure?

    Based on a systematic review of 62 healthcare-specific sustainability frameworks, here are 5 crucial priorities:

    1️⃣ Prove patient-centered outcomes:

    Interventions must consistently demonstrate improved health results, clinical relevance, and cost-effectiveness to justify continuation.

    2️⃣ Integrate into daily clinical routines:

    Sustainable healthcare initiatives are those that embed smoothly into existing systems, protocols, and professional practice — not remain siloed or optional.

    3️⃣ Track, evaluate, adapt:

    Healthcare systems must include mechanisms to monitor clinical effectiveness over time and adjust based on feedback, evidence, or shifting needs.

    4️⃣ Build capacity across roles:

    From frontline nurses to system administrators, sustainability depends on equipping staff with continuous training and decision-making power.

    5️⃣ Align with institutional priorities:

    Programs that reflect organisational goals (e.g., reducing readmissions, improving care coordination) are more likely to receive long-term support.

    Thus, sustainable healthcare means lasting impact — not short-term projects.

    At PROSDOMA, we support patient-centered, evidence-based systems that endure.

    Because care must continue, not collapse.

    Learn more: prosdoma.org

    by E.D.

    Source: Lennox, L., Maher, L., & Reed, J. (2018). “Navigating the sustainability landscape: a systematic review of sustainability approaches in healthcare.” Implementation Science, 13:27. 

    Sustainability in Conflict Zones: What Real Resilience Looks Like

    In crisis-affected regions, health isn’t just about hospitals — it’s about systems that protect dignity, promote equity, and grow from the ground up.

    According to Ugwu et al. (2025), aligning healthcare interventions with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) is critical to building long-term resilience and peace.

    Key strategies that actually work:

    1️⃣ Engage communities at every step:

    Programs are more effective and sustainable when shaped with communities, not for them.

    2️⃣ Prioritize mental health:

    MHPSS (Mental Health and Psychosocial Support) must be integrated with basic healthcare to address trauma in crisis contexts.

    3️⃣ Partner across sectors:

    From governments to grassroots organizations, collaboration builds culturally relevant and scalable solutions.

    4️⃣ Innovate for inclusion:

    Mobile clinics, telemedicine, and digital tools must be tailored to real-world needs — not just imported as one-size-fits-all fixes.

    These lessons align with SDGs 3, 16, and 17 — and are crucial for creating systems that survive disaster and sustain justice.

    That’s exactly why we admire PROSDOMA.

    Their work — from reforestation in Cameroon to climate education in Canada — doesn’t just tick boxes. It brings global strategies to life by rooting them in equity, community voice, and long-term impact.

    Learn more or connect: prosdoma.org

    by E.D.

    Source: Ugwu, C. N. et al. (2025). “Sustainable Development Goals and Resilient Healthcare Systems.” Medicine, 104(7):e41535.

    Efficiency Is the New Sustainability: What We Can Learn from Canadian Farms:

    In a changing climate, sustainability in agriculture means more than going organic — it means being efficient. But efficiency isn’t just about yields; it’s about using land, water, labor, and energy in ways that serve both people and the planet.

    Recent research from Western Newfoundland reveals that while many farms are technically efficient, they still struggle with environmental, cost, and scale inefficiencies — especially due to overuse of fertilizers, under-optimized land use, and lack of climate-resilient infrastructure (Islam et al., 2024).

    4 key takeaways:

    1️⃣ Environmental efficiency matters:

    Producing more while polluting less is the heart of sustainable agriculture. Some farms achieved this through composting, no-dig methods, and integrated systems.

    2️⃣ Education drives sustainability:

    Farms managed by educated producers showed significantly higher environmental scores — proof that knowledge is power in ecological stewardship.

    3️⃣ Water and soil conservation boost resilience:

    Techniques like rainwater harvesting and permaculture increased farm efficiency and climate resilience in short growing seasons.

    4️⃣ Policy and innovation must go hand in hand:

    Government support — through Living Labs and training — plays a vital role in scaling sustainable practices.

    At PROSDOMA, we believe sustainability begins with the wise use of resources and grows with local empowerment. Whether it’s climate-resilient farming in Africa or digital education in Canada, we turn knowledge into impact.

    Learn more: prosdoma.org

    by E.D.

    Source: Islam, K., Sabau, G., Dawson, J., Cheema, M., & Daraio, J. (2024). Evaluating agricultural sustainability in Newfoundland, Canada: Insights from a Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) approach. SSRN.

    Environmental Volunteering: Healing People While Restoring the Planet

    In the face of rising eco-anxiety, social isolation, and climate-related health threats, one powerful yet underutilized solution stands out: environmental volunteering.

    Recent research shows that volunteering in nature benefits not only the planet, but also the mind, body, and spirit. According to Patrick et al. (2022), environmental volunteers experience a wide range of co-benefits, including improved mental health, greater social inclusion, and a deeper connection to nature.

    Here are 4 key takeaways:

    1️⃣ Mental & emotional health improves:

    Volunteers report enhanced mood, reduced anxiety, and a sense of purpose — especially among those with prior mental health challenges.

    2️⃣ It builds social cohesion:

    Environmental activities foster friendships, civic pride, and cultural inclusion — creating shared spaces where all backgrounds feel welcome.

    3️⃣ It supports skills & opportunity:

    Many gain new knowledge, language abilities, and even employment skills — especially valuable for students and newcomers.

    4️⃣ Nature connection boosts resilience:

    Regular contact with nature cultivates environmental stewardship and well-being, reinforcing both planetary and personal health.

    At PROSDOMA, we believe in the power of nature-based solutions. Whether organizing community tree-planting in Africa or supporting eco-literacy for newcomers in Canada, we empower people and ecosystems together.

    Learn more or get involved: prosdoma.org/

    by E.D.

    Source: Patrick, R., Henderson-Wilson, C., & Ebden, M. (2022). Exploring the co-benefits of environmental volunteering for human and planetary health promotion. Health Promotion Journal of Australia, 33(1), 57–67. 

  • Water Access in Africa: A Global Challenge with Global Solutions?

    Water Access in Africa: A Global Challenge with Global Solutions?

    Despite decades of progress, millions across Africa still lack access to safe drinkable water and improved sanitation, a crisis with profound implications for public health, gender equality, and economic development.
      Recent research shows that globalization plays a complex but significant role in shaping water and sanitation access. According to Fotio & Nguea (2022), social globalization (e.g., cross-border media, migration, information flow) tends to improve access to water and sanitation in both urban and rural areas, but often widens the gap between them.
    Here are 4 key takeaways:
    1️⃣ Urban advantage grows:
    Globalization has a stronger positive impact on urban water and sanitation services than rural, risking deeper inequality.
    2️⃣ Social integration matters most:
    Among the three dimensions of globalization (economic, political, social), only social globalization significantly increases access to clean water and sanitation.
    3️⃣ Economic globalization isn’t always helpful:
    Trade and investment flows alone don’t guarantee better access, in some cases, they correlate with worsened sanitation services in rural areas.
    4️⃣ Policy matters more than flows:
    De jure globalization — the rules, policies, and frameworks that enable global integration — plays a more meaningful role than de facto flows in expanding access.

      At PROSDOMA, we believe dignity starts with the basics. From empowering migrants through clean water education to supporting climate-resilient infrastructure projects, we work at the intersection of global equity and local impact.
      Join us: prosdoma.org/
    by E.D.
      Source: Fotio, H. K., & Nguea, S. M. (2022). Access to water and sanitation in Africa: Does globalization matter? International Economics, 170, 79–91. https://lnkd.in/dCG7dDmK
    hashtag#WaterJustice hashtag#SanitationForAll hashtag#Globalization hashtag#AfricaDevelopment hashtag#SocialEquity hashtag#WASH hashtag#SustainableDevelopment hashtag#SDG6 hashtag#ClimateJustice hashtag#Prosdoma hashtag#TechForImpact

    Link for this post at Linkedin

    Can Artificial Intelligence Help Fight Global Warming?

    In the face of intensifying climate change, AI and machine learning are becoming powerful tools in weather prediction and disaster preparedness. But how we design, train, and apply these models will determine their real-world impact.

  • Universal Water Access: A Goal Still Far From Reality.

    Universal Water Access: A Goal Still Far From Reality.

    Despite bold global commitments, universal access to clean water and sanitation remains far from reality. While official statistics claimed dramatic progress under the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), recent analysis reveals a more sobering truth.
    Recent research by Tortajada and Biswas (2018) shows that global data used to measure access was flawed, focusing on “improved sources” rather than actual water quality or reliability. As a result, over 1.8 billion people still consume water contaminated with fecal matter, and many sanitation services fail to include proper wastewater treatment.
      Here are 4 takeaways:

    1️⃣ Baseline indicators were misleading:
    The MDGs (Millennium Development Goals – the UN’s global development agenda from 2000 to 2015) often overstated access by ignoring contamination, seasonal availability, and infrastructure failure.
    2️⃣ Academia must step up:
    Researchers have largely remained silent about data inaccuracies, missing the chance to reshape policy and accountability.
    3️⃣ The rural-urban divide persists:
    While urban areas see modest gains, rural and marginalized communities, including indigenous populations in Canada, remain underserved.
    4️⃣ Solutions must go beyond infrastructure:
    Equity, political will, long-term funding, and local ownership are key to delivering safe, sustainable water systems.

      At PROSDOMA, we believe access to clean water is a basic human right, not a development milestone to check off. From empowering local communities in Africa to supporting water justice for underserved populations in Canada, we act where data fails and dignity matters.
      Join us: prosdoma.org
    by E.D.
      Source: Tortajada, C., & Biswas, A. K. (2018). Achieving universal access to clean water and sanitation in an era of water scarcity: strengthening contributions from academia. Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability, 34, 21–25. https://lnkd.in/dkRMbBD4

    hashtag#WaterJusticehashtag#SDG6hashtag#SanitationForAllhashtag#DataForDevelopmenthashtag#Prosdomahashtag#GlobalGoalshashtag#CleanWaterAccesshashtag#AcademicResponsibilityhashtag#ClimateEquityhashtag

    #InfrastructureWithImpact

     Link for this post at Linkedin

  • A Life Torn Apart, a Future Rebuilt Piece by Piece.

    A Life Torn Apart, a Future Rebuilt Piece by Piece.

    There are mornings when Confidence Jato wakes up and remind herself that she survived.
    She survived the kidnappings. She survived the beatings that left her toes crushed and later
    amputated. She survived the fire that reduced her home to ashes.
    But some mornings, even survival feels hollow.“You wake up one morning and realise you
    are not complete,” she says, her voice carrying the weight of years lived between fear and
    hope.


    50-year-old Confidence once had an ordinary life in the English-speaking part of Cameroon;
    managing her property, raising her three children and planning a future with her husband but
    when the country’s bilingual crisis turned violent from 2016, normal life disappeared for her
    family from 2018.


    “When unarmed men get guns, they become powerful,” she says. In a place where power was
    bought with fear, no one was safe, not even those like Confidence who tried to stay neutral.
    Accused by the military of supporting separatists and by separatists of harbouring the
    military, Confidence became a target. She was kidnapped twice and had to pay a ransom. The
    second time she was kidnapped, the armed men beat her so severely that when she finally
    made it to a hospital, doctors had no choice but to amputate two of her toes.
    In 2019, her property was burned down and had no choice than to flee with her family to a
    French-speaking city, where survival was a daily calculation: “How and what will we eat?
    Where do we hide? How do we communicate when we cannot speak and understand
    French?”


    Each day she woke up to face a life that felt smaller, harder and more uncertain. When a
    friend in Canada asked her how to help, Confidence had no words to explain the depth of her
    loss. She simply said, “anything,” an answer spoken not from hope, but from exhaustion.
    In 2023, Confidence received an invitation from her friend to move to Canada. In this new
    journey, she carried little more than her wounds. It was there, at her most vulnerable, that she
    met PROSDOMA who did not just offer handouts but tools for rebuilding a life.

    Through PROSDOMA’s projects, Confidence was connected to a lawyer who helped her
    apply for Protected Person status. She was assisted to access food banks and clothing drives,
    easing the weight of basic survival.
    She was enrolled in computer classes, teaching her to use a tool that once seemed out of
    reach. Confidence, who had grown up where computers were considered a “luxury”, now
    navigates them as a key to her future.


    PROSDOMA has helped her build a resume from scratch, accredit her first degree and
    understand the complicated world of taxes and documentation in a new country. Today, she
    works in caregiving, with plans to get formal certification.
    With hopes to reunite with her husband and three children, who still live in hiding in
    Cameroon, her permanent residency application is underway thanks to support from
    PROSDOMA. For her, “on the mountain top, I can shout that PROSDOMA has been of great
    help to me.”


    Confidence may not feel complete, but she is still standing, still building, still daring to
    dream, strongly believing that sometimes, survival itself is the most powerful rebellion.

  • Volunteering: A Small Act, A Big Impact.

    Volunteering: A Small Act, A Big Impact.

    Volunteering isn’t just about giving your time—it’s about creating real change in the world around you. Every year, millions of people step up to help others, and the impact is incredible.

    Here’s how volunteering makes a difference:

    – It helps those in need. Many people rely on volunteers for food, shelter, support, and more.  

    – It protects the environment. Planting trees, cleaning up communities, and saving wildlife are just a few of the ways volunteers make Earth a better place.  

    – It powers nonprofits. Without volunteers, many organizations would struggle to survive. Your time helps them stretch their resources and reach more people.  

    – It benefits you. Volunteering can improve your health, build your confidence, teach new skills, and connect you with new friends and communities. 

    At PROSDOMA, we see this impact every day—from guiding newcomers in Alberta with essential services to supporting rural communities in Africa through sustainable farming. Whether you’re helping someone file taxes, learn basic computer skills, or find food and shelter, you’re part of something powerful.

    Want to make a difference? Join PROSDOMA and turn your free time into a force for good. Every hour matters. Every act counts.

    Source: https://www.habitatcltregion.org/blog/the-importance-of-volunteering/

    #volunteerpower #makeadifference #supportnewcomers #sustainablecommunities #climateactionnow #giveback #communityfirst #actforchange #prosdomaimpact #bethechange.

    AC