Presented by Ken Otieno (Technical Coordinator-Rangelands Initiative Africa) at the Sharing and Learning Rangelands Retreat in Jakarta, 21 September 2018
1. Rangelands Initiative Africa
Sharing and Learning
Rangelands Retreat in Jakarta
September 21st, 2018
Ken Otieno-Technical Coordinator-Rangelands Initiative Africa
2. AFRICA REGION
CURRENT MEMBERS ACTIVELY ENGAGING
RECONCILE-Kenya
MBOSCUDA-Cameroon
ILRI-Kenya and Ethiopia
TNRF-Tanzania
UCRT-Tanzania
COMISUD-Cameroon
RBM-West Africa Region
CICODEV-Senegal
PAICODEO-Tanzania
TALA/NES TZ-Tanzania
CED-Cameroon
IPAR-Senegal
GLTN/UNHABITA-Kenya
CORET-Nigeria
CIRAD
VSF-B/CELEP
IFAD-Sudan
IFAD-Nigeria
IFAD-Tanzania
PROCASUR
3. CYCLE OF ENGAGEMENT AND SUPPORT
Knowledge
generation,
consolidation
Innovation,
demonstration
, piloting
Up-scaling
Policy and
practice
Mainstreaming
Learning
4. OPERATING CONTEXT
Insecurity and conflict
Different livelihood systems
Vulnerability to natural disasters
Increased Growing trend Shrinking
5. INTERVENTIONS BY MEMBERS AND PARTNERS
Support SRLM
approaches &
Technologies
Strengthen
institutions MSP Capacity
KM
Influence dev. a
People CLGP
Climate change
& conflict
sensitive
programming
Secure rangelands and resources
6. STEPS TOWARDS SECURE RANGELANDS
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Action oriented
approach
Working with
members and
partners example;
STDM tool, PRM
IFAD &
PROCASUR
Publication of
outputs e.g.
Spatial maps
In-country
projects and or
to regional
initiatives
ILC members, partners, governments and development
partners
Case studies, Good
practices, Policy briefs.
Research &
Documentation
Participatory
GIS mapping
Technology
Study tours, online
networking,
Learning and
sharing
Increased visibility
of rangelands &
resources
Awareness
Piloting, up-
scale, out scale.
Innovation
7. RI APPROACHES SECURING RANGELANDS
Learn, share,
influence
Facilitates and creates
spaces for members &
partners
Studies, lesson learning,
documentation
Knowledge Management
Joint planning by members in
the region
Joint actions
Tools and guides for
sustainable rangelands
management
Provides Technical
Support
8. SUCCESS REGISTERED
• In Ethiopia – PLUP in rangelands manual production with
ILRI, Oxfam, Farm Africa & SOS (customary LUP case
studies)
• Enabling the mainstreaming of PRM in resilience projects;
livestock corridor proposal (Min Livestock);
• In Kenya – Community land law as an opportunity towards
piloting of land use planning
• Embedding rangelands in the National Engagement Strategy
in Tanzania, Kenya, Cameroon
• Piloting of participatory rangelands planning in Baringo
• Livestock corridors; McGill I-CAN-Project with ACC
• Land use planning processes
9. LEARNINGS AND SHARING
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Learning from local framework
The group ranch
model in Kenya
Joint village LUP
process Tanzania
Participatory Rangelands Management Ethiopia
:
While still grounded in the concrete practices of
rangelands users, this level of learning includes
documents elaborated by research institutions and civil
society organisations, meant to influence the decisions of
practitioners, policy-makers and policy-implementers
Alliance farming for instance in
Cameroon enables Semi-nomadic
pastoralist communities pastoralists to use
innovative livelihood strategies in order to
adapt to climate change and reduce conflict
Partner-based
leveloflearning
R
egionaland
inter-
regionallearning
Institution-based
levelof
learning
C
om
m
unity
based
initiatives
13. • Partnership amongst
farmers and pastoralists
• Policy and legal systems
that is facilitative and not
prescriptive
• Tenure security for the
smallholder farmers land
and grazing areas for
pastoralists
LESSONS