About IDLS
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Philosophy IDLS has a business philosophy that is grounded in social, environmental and economic justice:
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Our approach to doing business is people-centred. IDLS works in partnership with like-minded organisations and Associates in the countries and sectors in which we specialise.
IDLS is an ethical and carbon-neutral organisation. We minimise CO2 emissions through energy, transport and materials. We use recycled and re-used products wherever possible. We offset emissions we cannot avoid, using UNFCCC compliant mechanisms.
People
Jeremy Doyle
Jeremy has over 15 years of experience in international development policy, research and implementation in Europe and emerging economies.
He has worked in many developing countries for a wide range of public and private clients. This includes work in China, India, Nepal and Sri Lanka, as well as throughout East and Southern Africa,. Jeremy lived in Mozambique and Guyana from 1997-2000, delivering rural power and water supplies.
His technical knowledge covers analytical and practical aspects of carbon markets (CDM and voluntary offsets), conventional power generation, regulation, renewable power technologies, off-grid and household energy, bio-fuel and energy efficiency.
He has a Masters in Environment from Oxford University and an Engineering degree from Bath University.
Contact: jeremy.doyle@idls.co.uk
José Sluijs-Doyle
José has 20 years of experience in project and programme management and design. For the past 13 years her work has focused on capacity building and the implementation and monitoring and evaluation of HIV policy, projects and programmes.
José has experienced both the challenges of working with small organisations as well as with national governments in a variety of posts. She has lived and worked in Southern Africa from 1996-2000 in both programme management and capacity building roles.
In 2001-2002 she coordinated the Regional AIDS Initiative for Southern Africa (RAISA) for VSO-UK. From 2003-2006 she was the programme manager/backstop for the £20m DFID funded Kenya HIV/AIDS Prevention and Care Programme (HAPAC). Most recently her freelance work has focussed on the analysis of AIDS in Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (UNDP/WorldBank/UNAIDS), research into mainstreaming HIV and how it can contribute to achieving the Universal Access targets (UNAIDS) and research into capacity building with HIV network organisations (VSO).
She is a strong people manager and team player with excellent communication, training and facilitation skills. José has a Bachelors degree in Economics, HES Amsterdam, an MSc in International Development, Bath University, in which she focused on HIV and AIDS policy.
Contact: jose.sluijs-doyle@idls.co.uk
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