Concept note. Reinforcement of pastoral civil society in East Africa: a programme of capacity building and participatory action-research
2001
C. Hesse | M. Ochieng Odhiambo
This concept note explores initiatives aiming at supporting pastoral civil society in East Africa.The goals of the initiative include:create conditions such that pastoral groups can play a more effective and visible role in the design and implementation of policies to improve their livelihoodscreation of a vibrant, accountable and effective pastoral civil society movement capable of articulating and implementing their member's vision of their own developmentthe active engagement of pastoral groups in regional and national policy making processes resulting in improved livelihood opportunities for pastoral peopleThe concept paper concludes that:pastoral people are continuing to be marginalisedalthough information on pastoralism is available, many policy makers, government staff, NGO personnel, etc. do not fully understand its dynamics which partly explains their inability to design and implement supportive policies for the sectorthere are also political reasons to explain why pastoralists are marginalised. For example, local people are infrequently excluded from decision making and policy influence. In addition to this, Northern cultural values and ideologies continue to shape environmental policy in dryland Africa. These ideologies are frequently shared by Southern policy makers. This ideological position tends to portray pastoralist livelihood practices as irrational and destructivepastoralist people are often unable or lack the knowledge to fight their own causepower relations and inequalities at both a national and local level are vital factors in determining determining how different interest groups negotiate access to and control over resources resources, particularly within the arena of pastoralismThe article recommends that:if pastoralists are to improve their livelihoods, pastoral groups in East Africa need to learn how to master the policy process, putting themselves at the centre of local and national debates designed to address their priorities and needsalthough capacity is a key objective of most pastoral projects in East Africa, relatively litlle attention has been paid to helping pastoral people analyse and ulimately contest the current development paradigm that tends to keep them in poverty and on the margins of societypastoral groups in East Africa need to acquire the ability to speak in an informed and authoritative manner on policy issues of concern to them, and to express this in a language that is understandable not only to policy makers but also to their grass-roots membershipthe challenge of empowering pastoralists requires a regional programme of education and training in support of pastoral civil society in East Africa, which RECONCILE and IIED are committed to undertaking
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