Livelihoods


Olaimutiai Primary School (Maasai Land, Kenya)

Maasai women in Kenya. Women are playing a key role in pastoralists’ diversification (picture credit: Konrad Glogowski on Flickr). 

A feature story carried by IRIN this week highlights how women are playing an increasingly important role in pastoralist livelihoods diversification in Kenya.

‘Along a small seasonal stream in Ewaso Nyiro village in Narok, southwestern Kenya, Leleseina Nkoitoi sells vegetables from a stall whose bright colours contrast with the parched landscape. In the past, Nkoitoi, like other rural women from the predominantly pastoralist Maasai community, looked after a small herd of livestock, the home herd, which is left behind for the family’s sustenance when the rest of the herd migrates with the men in search of pasture.’

‘Recurrent droughts and subsequent livestock deaths, as well as the closing off of important migration routes due to privatization of sections of the drylands for large-scale agriculture, are forcing pastoralists like Nkoitoi to diversify into agriculture and the market economy.’

From the sale of her crop of cabbages, Nkoitoi earns up to 2,000 shillings (about US$24) a day.

‘“Every day, I make good money and I am able to save. Now I even have a bank account and I keep my money there,” she said. “Now even if drought comes, I can go to the bank and get money to buy food for my children.”’

‘Women are playing a key role in pastoralists’ diversification, according to a recent report published by the Regional Learning and Advocacy Programme (REGLAP). ”In the past and simply put, men tended to have more roles in and responsibility over livestock, and women over household tasks and childcare. Today, some key changes can be seen.”‘

‘Besides taking up agricultural activities, pastoral women are also migrating to work as domestic servants, in restaurants and breweries, for example in Uganda’s Karamoja region, leaving the men to work in the homestead plots.’

“Women can, with adequate training on agricultural production, lead their families out of perennial food insecurity.”

Read the complete story: Kenya: The changing face of pastoralism published 26 March 2012 on the IRIN website.

Watch an ILRI photofilm on how pastoralist livelihoods are changing in Kitengela, Kenya.

For the November 2011 ‘liveSTOCK Exchange’ event at ILRI, Steve Staal, Derek Baker, Karl Rich, Ayele Gelan, Acho Okike, Delia Grace, Mohammad Jabbar, Mohamadou Fadiga, Ranjitha Puskur, Lucy Lapar, Berhanu Gebremedhin, Amos Omore and Francis Wanyoike prepared a series of issue briefs on smallholder livestock producers, consumers, and development …

View a presentation to the Livestock Exchange event:

 

Download Issue Brief 15 on the interface of market access and SPS requirements.

Download Issue Brief 16 on animal-source foods in the developing world.

Download Issue Brief 17 on changing approaches to pro-poor livestock market development: Innovation and upgrading in the value chain.

Download Issue Brief 19 on smallholder competitiveness and market-driven technology uptake.


On 9 and 10 November 2011, the ILRI Board of Trustees held a 2-day ‘liveSTOCK Exchange’ to discuss and reflect on livestock research for development. The event synthesized sector and ILRI learning and helped frame future livestock research for development directions.

The liveSTOCK Exchange will also mark the leadership and contributions of Dr. Carlos Seré as ILRI Director General.  See all posts in this series / Sign up for email alerts

For the November 2011 ‘liveSTOCK Exchange’ event at ILRI, Tim Williams – Africa Director at the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) reflects on ILRI’s livestock work in West Africa …

Two key questions
Back in 2000, two key questions occupied the minds of those of us who worked on the development of the ILRI’s Strategy–Livestock: A Pathway out of Poverty—Where are the poor livestock producers located and how can livestock research be applied to lift them out of poverty in an environmentally sustainable way? Ten years on, it is pertinent to review how ILRI has dealt with these two questions.

While the institute satisfactorily answered the first question, dealing with the second question remains a work in progress. To be sure, notable achievements have been recorded in linking livestock producers, particularly dairy producers to markets, in improving crop-livestock integration to increase food output and enhance soil fertility and in application of biotechnology and landscape genomics to improve livestock breeding and vaccine production. Despite these achievements, food insecurity and poverty persist in many livestock producing areas in Africa. Today, and arguably with more pressing urgency, livestock research for development needs to contend with the triple challenge of improving food and nutrition security, reducing poverty and enhancing environmental sustainability.

A balancing act?
The increasing demand for meat and dairy products in emerging economies, the competition for land and water resources between human food, animal feed and energy and the adverse impact on the environment of intensive livestock production have all combined to give livestock a bad press in the West. The image portrayed in the news media is that of a grain munching, water gulping and gas belching pollutant. What this imagery misses is the role that livestock play in the existential battle of poor livestock producers against food insecurity and poverty in the face of climate variability and change. The balancing act for ILRI then is to use its scientific research to address the global concerns of greenhouse gas emissions, environmental pollution and spread of zoonotic diseases caused by livestock without losing track of the triple challenge faced by poor livestock producers in developing countries, particularly Africa.

What will it entail to walk this tight rope? Research will be required to increase livestock productivity while using less arable land and water resources. Increase in productivity will come from the development of new technologies and better adoption and utilization of existing ones. Improvements in the quantity and quality of feed, in nutritional management and in the development of vaccines and other new drugs that target the animal health problems faced by livestock producers in Africa will be essential. Establishment of innovation platforms that bring together livestock producers, researchers, private sector entrepreneurs, representatives of civil society and the government will help facilitate adoption of new technologies. Enhancing the access of poor livestock producers to markets and creating the policy environment that will allow them to enter and move up viable livestock value chains will be equally important. Producing more products from fewer animals will save land and water resources and will minimize adverse environmental impacts. This is a tall order, but it is a task that ILRI together with its partners must address in the coming years.

The dire consequences that followed the recent drought in the Horn of Africa demonstrate the vital importance of water to both human beings and livestock. For Africa, climate change predictions point to an era of lower water availability in the future. In the face of dwindling water resources, the water needs of livestock must be balanced with the needs of the other agricultural subsectors—crop, horticulture and fisheries—as well as the ecosystem. On-going work between ILRI, IWMI, and the CGIAR Challenge Programme on Water and Food on multiple uses of water resources, rainwater management in mixed crop-livestock systems and improved management of wetlands and rangeland must be continued and deepened.

Rebuild core competencies in Africa
To address the triple challenge, ILRI’s presence in Africa, especially outside the headquarters, needs to be strengthened. Core expertise in livestock production (i.e. animal nutritionists, forage agronomists, range ecologists) seems to have declined over the last ten years and the number of scientists in this category appears incongruent with the scale of the problem to be addressed. Going forward, ILRI needs to rebuild core competence in these areas and deploy them to critical sub-regions on the continent. The opportunity for closer collaboration and sharing of expertise across CGIAR centres in the context of the CGIAR Research Programs should be exploited.

Contributed by Tim Williams, International Water Management Institute, Ghana. In the past, Williams held the position of Regional Representative and Research Team Leader (West Africa) at the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI).


On 9 and 10 November 2011, the ILRI Board of Trustees hosted a 2-day ‘liveSTOCK Exchange’ to discuss and reflect on livestock research for development. The event synthesized sector and ILRI learning and helped frame future livestock research for development directions.

The liveSTOCK Exchange also marked the leadership and contributions of Dr. Carlos Seré as ILRI Director General. See all posts in this series / Sign up for email alerts

Africa Everyday

Kenya cow bell, on loan from Gary K Clarke, of Cowabunga Safaris, for Africa Everyday Exhibit (image credit: Topeka & Shawnee Country Public Library).

Livestock keeping means food security and livelihoods for the world’s poorest people.

That’s the message delivered by Joyce Turk, senior livestock advisor at the United States Agency for International Development, at a conference last month, where she discussed the importance of animal-based foods to human health and food security.

The livestock sector globally employs 1.3 billion people, either directly or indirectly, and is responsible for up to 50% of global agriculture GDP,” Turk said.

Malnutrition and undernutrition cause 3.5 to 5.5 million deaths annually in children under 5, she continued, before going on to give as an example of the importance of livestock to food security the drought affecting the Horn of Africa, where most of the population keep and herd cattle, sheep, goats and camels for their livelihoods and where famine conditions continue in southern Somalia.

In Africa, livestock are absolutely critical to livelihoods and to life,’ Turk said, . . . and African relief experts are emphasizing that the loss of animals is a ‘critical factor driving families to destitution, famine and death from starvation’.

Animal-source foods, she explained, provide 15% of total food energy and 25% of total dietary protein; in addition, animal protein has 1.4 times more biological value than plant foods, particularly in terms of essential amino acids and micronutrients. This fact, she said, makes milk, meat and eggs ‘critical for immune system functions, cognitive and physical development, work productivity and the life span and quality of life,” among mal- and under-nourished populations.

As evidence, Turk cited a study conducted by the Global Livestock Collaborative Services Support Program on Kenyan schoolchildren and another conducted by the University of Southern Australia.

Read the full article at Drovers CattleNetwork: Livestock critical to human health and global food security, 18 Oct 2011.

A working paper by Gebremedhin Woldewahid, Berhanu Gebremedhin, Kahsay Berhe and Dirk Hoekstra on Shifting towards market-oriented irrigated crops development as an approach to improve the income of farmers: Evidence from northern Ethiopia was released on 5 May 2011.

Rainfed crop production in Ethiopia’s semi-arid areas is associated with extreme rainfall variability which occasionally leads to complete crop failure. Most of the farmers in the Atsbi-Womberta district of Eastern Tigray region in northern Ethiopia are classified as food insecure. To improve farmers’ livelihoods, interventions targeted at resource conservation and better use of water for market-oriented irrigated crops development have been promoted.

This paper analyses the process and outcomes of rural communities shifting towards market-oriented irrigated crops development based on diversification into high value irrigated crops, a value chain approach, and demand driven, participatory and knowledge-based extension. Results show that farmers gradually shifted to non-cereal, more market-oriented irrigated crops, in which the share of market-oriented irrigated crops increased from 27% of the total irrigated land in 2004 to 89% in 2009. Furthermore, average incomes in beneficiary households increased more than those in non-beneficiary households. This suggests that investments in resource conservation can be enhanced with short-term income-generating and market-linked activities.

Download the paper

Polly Ericksen

ILRI scientist Polly Ericksen says that areas that will be hit hardest by climate change are areas where farmers are already struggling due to new weather patterns (image credit: ILRI/Anita Ghosh).

Julio Godoy reported yesterday in Inter Press Service Africa (IPS) on the climate change meeting in Bonn, saying that climate change is putting African agriculture and food supply at risk.

‘Climate change and global warming are likely to have dramatically negative effects on African agriculture and food supply by reducing river runoffs and water recharge, especially in semi-arid zones such as Southern Africa, two new reports say.

‘Both studies were released while thousands of delegates from around the world gathered June 6–17 in the German city of Bonn to take part in the new United Nations (UN) Climate Change conference. New research supports the need for a revamped international regime of reduction of greenhouse gases emissions, the main cause of global warming.

‘The first study, “Climate change, water, and food security” by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) constitutes a comprehensive survey of existing scientific knowledge on the anticipated consequences of climate change for water use in agriculture. . . .

‘The talks in Bonn are in preparation of yet another climate change global summit in Durban, South Africa, in December.

‘Initially, it was expected that the Durban summit would ratify a new international regime on reduction of greenhouse gas emissions in industrialised countries, and set up a financial plan to pay for climate change adaptation and mitigation measures in developing countries.

‘This new regime is expected to come into force starting 2013, after the present Kyoto protocol measures expire 2012. But the talks in Bonn, the last round of negotiations before the summit of Durban, have not produced any significant advances. . . .

‘The second study, by the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) in cooperation with the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI), comes to similar predictions, and warns that climate change is likely to cause widespread famines in sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia by destroying the basis of local agriculture.

‘The report reiterates that food security outcomes differ according to socio-economic and gender characteristics, including wealth, age and status in the household. The latter is affected by whether you are a woman or a man.

‘”We are starting to see much more clearly where the effect of climate change on agriculture could intensify hunger and poverty”, in Africa and other parts of the developing word, Patti Kristjanson, a scientist at CGIAR’s research programme on climate change, agriculture and food security, said during the presentation of the study.

‘The report, “Mapping hotspots of climate change and food insecurity in the global tropics”, identified regions of intense climate change and agricultural vulnerability by examining a variety of climate models and indicators of food problems.

‘The authors then created a series of detailed maps of the tropical regions of the world, based on those data.

‘”‘When you put these maps together you immediately identify the regions around the world, in Africa, Latin America, and Asia, where the arrival of stressful growing conditions (due to climate change) could be especially disastrous,” Polly Ericksen, a senior scientist at ILRI, and the study’s lead author, said.

‘”These are areas highly exposed to climate shifts, where survival is strongly linked to the fate of regional crop and livestock yields, and where chronic food problems indicate that farmers are already struggling and they lack the capacity to adapt to new weather patterns,” Ericksen said.’

Read the whole article in IPS: CLIMATE CHANGE: African Agriculture and Food Supply at Risk, 18 June 2001.

Read an ILRI News Blog story on the ILRI-CCAFS report: In the crosshairs of hunger and climate change: New ILRI-CCAFS study maps the global hotspots, 3 June 2011.

Read the report itself: Mapping hotspots of climate change and food insecurity in the global tropics, by Polly Ericksen, Philip Thornton, An Notenbaert, L Cramer, Peter Jones and Mario Herrero 2011. CCAFS Report no. 5 (advance copy). CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS). Copenhagen, Denmark. Also available online at: www.ccafs.cgiar.org.

Click here for the CCAFS online media room with more materials, including versions of the news release in English, Spanish, French and Chinese, and also versions of the two maps shown here in high resolution suitable for print media.

IFAD Rural Poverty Report 2011

ILRI Corporate Report 2009-2011: Cover

Mohamed Béavogui, director of the west and central African division of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), has the following to say in the Guardian‘s Poverty Matters Blog.

‘Africa’s smallholder farmers not only have the potential to produce enough food for export—and thereby contribute to food security worldwide—but to help lead the way to robust growth and development across the continent. That is, if the right kinds of investments and policy approaches are taken to vastly improve their productivity through better access to technology, credit, transportation and markets. . . .

‘Agricultural markets are changing. We no longer need to think exclusively in terms of export crops because new market opportunities are emerging on Africa’s doorstep. As cities expand and incomes increase, people in urban areas are changing their eating habits and becoming consumers who want more meat, dairy products and vegetables, and they expect higher quality standards—we are seeing this across the continent. . . .

‘Ifad’s rural poverty report outlines how small farmers can be helped not only to become more productive, but to farm in a way that is more sustainable in terms of natural resources, and more resilient to climate change.

‘If we can create the conditions for poor rural people in Africa to move out of subsistence and into the marketplace—then we will have our best chance to transform Africa into a continent that not only feeds itself, but also plays a key role in feeding the world.’

Read the whole article at the Guardian‘s Poverty Matters Blog: African farmers can help to transform the continent, 4 May 2011.

And see the current, 2009–2010, corporate report of the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI): Back to the future: Revisiting Mixed crop-Livestock Systems, 2010, which agrees with the IFAD report, and further argues that the backbone of Africa’s farmers are small-scale farmers mixing crop growing with livestock raising.

Foods of Khulungira: Fish stew, boiled maize, mixed beans, dried mushrooms, pumpkin leaves and egg stew

Foods of Khulungira Village, in central Malawi: Fish stew (nsomba zophika), boiled maize (chimanga chophika), mixed beans with salt and oil (nyemba zophika), dried mushrooms with groundnuts (bowa wofutsa), pumpkin leaves with pumpkin blossoms and potatoes (nkhwani wophatikiza ndi maungu anthete ndi kachewere wophika) and boiled eggs with tomato, onions, oil and salt (mazira ophika ndi phwetekere, anyezi, mafuta ndi mchere) (photo credit: CGIAR/Mann). Translations from Chichewa, Malawi’s national language; by Christopher Katema (ICRAF).

A provocative article appears in the current, special food, issue of Foreign Policy (May/June 2011), ‘More than 1 billion people are hungry in the world: But what if the experts are wrong,’ by Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo, who run a ‘poverty lab’ at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and are authors of Poor Economics: A Radical Rethinking of the Way to Fight Global Poverty, from which this excerpt is adapted. Banerjee and Duflo attempt to unravel some of the complexities underlying bald statistics on world hunger that are rather casually tossed round aid and development circles. Excerpts from their Foreign Policy article/book follow.

‘For many in the West, poverty is almost synonymous with hunger. Indeed, the announcement by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization in 2009 that more than 1 billion people are suffering from hunger grabbed headlines in a way that any number of World Bank estimates of how many poor people live on less than a dollar a day never did.

‘But is it really true? Are there really more than a billion people going to bed hungry each night? Our research on this question has taken us to rural villages and teeming urban slums around the world, collecting data and speaking with poor people about what they eat and what else they buy, from Morocco to Kenya, Indonesia to India. We’ve also tapped into a wealth of insights from our academic colleagues. What we’ve found is that the story of hunger, and of poverty more broadly, is far more complex than any one statistic or grand theory; it is a world where those without enough to eat may save up to buy a TV instead, where more money doesn’t necessarily translate into more food, and where making rice cheaper can sometimes even lead people to buy less rice. . . .

‘In many countries, the definition of poverty itself has been connected to food; the thresholds for determining that someone was poor were originally calculated as the budget necessary to buy a certain number of calories, plus some other indispensable purchases, such as housing. A “poor” person has essentially been classified as someone without enough to eat.

‘So it is no surprise that government efforts to help the poor are largely based on the idea that the poor desperately need food and that quantity is what matters. Food subsidies are ubiquitous in the Middle East: Egypt spent $3.8 billion on food subsidies in the 2008 fiscal year, some 2 percent of its GDP. Indonesia distributes subsidized rice. Many states in India have a similar program. In the state of Orissa, for example, the poor are entitled to 55 pounds of rice a month at about 1 rupee per pound, less than 20 percent of the market price. Currently, the Indian Parliament is debating a Right to Food Act, which would allow people to sue the government if they are starving. Delivering such food aid is a logistical nightmare. In India it is estimated that more than half of the wheat and one-third of the rice gets “lost” along the way. To support direct food aid in this circumstance, one would have to be quite convinced that what the poor need more than anything is more grain.

‘But what if the poor are not, in general, eating too little food? What if, instead, they are eating the wrong kinds of food, depriving them of nutrients needed to be successful, healthy adults? What if the poor aren’t starving, but choosing to spend their money on other priorities? Development experts and policymakers would have to completely reimagine the way they think about hunger. And governments and aid agencies would need to stop pouring money into failed programs and focus instead on finding new ways to truly improve the lives of the world’s poorest. . . .

‘The poor seem to have many choices, and they don’t choose to spend as much as they can on food. Equally remarkable is that even the money that people do spend on food is not spent to maximize the intake of calories or micronutrients. Studies have shown that when very poor people get a chance to spend a little bit more on food, they don’t put everything into getting more calories. Instead, they buy better-tasting, more expensive calories. . . . [A]t least among these very poor urban households, getting more calories was not a priority: Getting better-tasting ones was.

‘All told, many poor people might eat fewer calories than we—or the FAO—think is appropriate. But this does not seem to be because they have no other choice; rather, they are not hungry enough to seize every opportunity to eat more. So perhaps there aren’t a billion “hungry” people in the world after all. . . .

‘Should we let it rest there, then? Can we assume that the poor, though they may be eating little, do eat as much as they need to?

‘That also does not seem plausible. While Indians may prefer to buy things other than food as they get richer, they and their children are certainly not well nourished by any objective standard. Anemia is rampant; body-mass indices are some of the lowest in the world; almost half of children under 5 are much too short for their age, and one-fifth are so skinny that they are considered to be “wasted.”

‘And this is not without consequences. There is a lot of evidence that children suffering from malnutrition generally grow into less successful adults. In Kenya, children who were given deworming pills in school for two years went to school longer and earned, as young adults, 20 percent more than children in comparable schools who received deworming for just one year. Worms contribute to anemia and general malnutrition, essentially because they compete with the child for nutrients. And the negative impact of undernutrition starts before birth. In Tanzania, to cite just one example, children born to mothers who received sufficient amounts of iodine during pregnancy completed between one-third and one-half of a year more schooling than their siblings who were in utero when their mothers weren’t being treated. It is a substantial increase, given that most of these children will complete only four or five years of schooling in total. In fact, the study concludes that if every mother took iodine capsules, there would be a 7.5 percent increase in the total educational attainment of children in Central and Southern Africa. This, in turn, could measurably affect lifetime productivity.

‘Better nutrition matters for adults, too. In another study, in Indonesia, researchers tested the effects of boosting people’s intake of iron, a key nutrient that prevents anemia. They found that iron supplements made men able to work harder and significantly boosted income. A year’s supply of iron-fortified fish sauce cost the equivalent of $6, and for a self-employed male, the yearly gain in earnings was nearly $40—an excellent investment.

‘If the gains are so obvious, why don’t the poor eat better? Eating well doesn’t have to be prohibitively expensive. Most mothers could surely afford iodized salt, which is now standard in many parts of the world, or one dose of iodine every two years (at 51 cents per dose). Poor households could easily get a lot more calories and other nutrients by spending less on expensive grains (like rice and wheat), sugar, and processed foods, and more on leafy vegetables and coarse grains. But in Kenya, when the NGO that was running the deworming program asked parents in some schools to pay a few cents for deworming their children, almost all refused, thus depriving their children of hundreds of dollars of extra earnings over their lifetime. . . .

‘It is simply not very easy to learn about the value of many of these nutrients based on personal experience. Iodine might make your children smarter, but the difference is not huge, and in most cases you will not find out either way for many years. Iron, even if it makes people stronger, does not suddenly turn you into a superhero. The $40 extra a year the self-employed man earned may not even have been apparent to him, given the many ups and downs of his weekly income.

‘So it shouldn’t surprise us that the poor choose their foods not mainly for their cheap prices and nutritional value, but for how good they taste. . . .

‘We often see the world of the poor as a land of missed opportunities and wonder why they don’t invest in what would really make their lives better. But the poor may well be more skeptical about supposed opportunities and the possibility of any radical change in their lives. They often behave as if they think that any change that is significant enough to be worth sacrificing for will simply take too long. This could explain why they focus on the here and now, on living their lives as pleasantly as possible and celebrating when occasion demands it.

‘We asked Oucha Mbarbk what he would do if he had more money. He said he would buy more food. Then we asked him what he would do if he had even more money. He said he would buy better-tasting food. We were starting to feel very bad for him and his family, when we noticed the TV and other high-tech gadgets. Why had he bought all these things if he felt the family did not have enough to eat? He laughed, and said, “Oh, but television is more important than food!”‘

Read the whole article in the special food issue of Foreign Policy: More than 1 billion people are hungry in the world, by Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo, May/June 2011.

In the same issue is an article on the The new geopolitics of food by Lester Brown, previously reported on in this blog, and a wonderful photoessay on How food explains the world by Joshua Keating. The latter includes the following (delicious) mouthfuls, but be sure to click on the link to see the pictures that accompany them.

The Strategic Pork Reserve
‘China is a porcine superpower as well as a human one. The Middle Kingdom boasts more than 446 million pigs—one for every three Chinese people and more than the next 43 countries combined. So when there’s a major disruption in the pork supply it hits the economy hard; the “blue-ear pig” disease that forced Chinese farmers to slaughter millions of pigs in 2008, for example, drove the country’s inflation rate to its highest level in a decade. To prevent further disruptions, the Chinese government established a strategic pork reserve shortly afterward, keeping icy warehouses around the country stocked with frozen pork that can be released during times of shortage. The government was forced to add to the reserve—taking pigs off the market—in the spring of 2010 when a glut led to prices collapsing. . . .

Bug Bites
‘. . . An insect-based diet could provide just as much protein as meat (plus key vitamins and minerals) with far fewer emissions, the FAO says. And breeding insects such as locusts, crickets, and mealworms emits one-tenth the amount of methane that raising livestock does, scientists say. The idea isn’t as far-out as one might think. More than 1,000 insects are already known to be eaten in about 80 percent of the world’s countries, though the idea remains a source of revulsion in the Western world. The FAO is putting its money where its mouth is, investing in insect-farming projects in Laos, where locusts and crickets are already popular delicacies. A world conference on insect eating is planned for 2013. . . .

Colonel Sanders Imperialism
‘In the early days of Egypt’s anti-government uprising this winter, some journalists attempted to label it the “Koshary Revolution” after Egypt’s traditional dish of rice, lentils, macaroni, and fried onions. But Hosni Mubarak’s embattled regime was hoping to tie the protesters to a more sinister foodstuff: Kentucky Fried Chicken. Reports on state television described protesters in Cairo’s Tahrir Square munching on free buckets of KFC, seeing them as proof of subversive foreign influence, though independent journalists at the scene couldn’t find a particularly high number of KFC eaters. The U.S. chain has about 100 restaurants in Egypt, compared with fewer than 60 for McDonald’s, but the price of a meal, which can be up to three days’ wages, makes it a rare delicacy for most Egyptians. There were also reports of the government paying its thugs with chicken dinners, and street vendors jokingly began shouting “Kentucky” to hawk everything from popcorn to falafel. Surprisingly, this wasn’t the first time that KFC has been cast as the enemy in the Muslim world. . . . ‘

This Research report by Nancy Johnson and Ayago Wambile on The impacts of the Arid Lands Resource Management Project (ALRMPII) on livelihoods and vulnerability in the arid and semi-arid lands of Kenya was released on 04 April, 2011.

There is an urgent need for new approaches and effective models for managing risk and promoting sustainable development in arid and semi-arid lands (ASALs), especially in the face of climate change and increasing frequency of drought in many areas. This study assesses the impacts of the Arid Lands Resource Management Project (ALRMPII), a community-based drought management initiative implemented in 28 arid and semi-arid districts in Kenya from 2003 to 2010.

The project sought to improve the effectiveness of emergency drought response while at the same time reducing vulnerability, empowering local communities, and raising the profile of ASALs in national policies and institutions. In this evaluation, multiple data sources and analytical methods were used to assess impacts on the project’s five key performance indicators (KPIs). The evaluation focused on 10 randomly selected districts. Data sources included a household panel data set (505 households), anthropometric measurements (>600,000 observations), 21 focus group discussions in project intervention communities, a survey of 95 response agencies, and key informant interviews. Though the project was not implemented according to an experimental framework, where appropriate difference-in-difference analysis was used to assess impact on indicators.

Download the paper

Livestock farmer Jinny Lemson brings her cows home to stable in central Malawi

In Khulungira Village, in central Malawi, farmer Jinny Lemson, 32, started acquiring livestock with her husband ten years ago as an investment. Neither grew up with animals. First they bought chickens, then goats, then pigs, sheep, and cows. They also have ducks, cats and dogs. They grow all the feed on their farm. ‘Our life has completely changed. We used to eat meat once a month. Now we’re eating it twice a week, and eggs three times a week. The kids are healthier than before.’ Here she brings her cows in to stable.

The Washington Post has published an opinion piece by Michael Gerson that ostensibly aims to educate its readers on just how US budget cuts could impact poor people struggling to get ahead in poor countries.

To do this, Gerson tells the story of a single Malawian woman, Donata Kuchawo, and her single cow, Zoali (‘a resting place’). It is remarkable how often such a woman or a man ‘and a cow’ stories serve to tell a bigger tale, a tale emblematic of the struggles and successes of poor rural people in poor countries everywhere—and how much these people depend on their ‘livestock assets’ to make a living, and to work themselves out of poverty. Here’s Kuchawo’s story.

‘Donata Kuchawo’s cow pen is as clean as a well-tended garden. She has only one cow, but she owes it a great deal.

‘Before the cow, she scraped by on subsistence farming—exhausting, back-bending work, rewarded only by survival. Her five children spent part of each year hungry.

‘After getting the cow, she could sell its milk at the local dairy cooperative, which provided year-round income. She paid the school fees for her children and bought fertilizer to increase the yield of her maize field. She now employs four people to work her property, grows soybeans, peaches and sugar cane, and raises ducks and five pigs. . . .

‘Despite the varied frustrations of the farmer, her life is now easier than scratching dirt in a field. She named her cow Zoali, which means “a resting place”. . . .

‘About 80 percent of Malawians are farmers. Their nation is one of the world’s most impoverished, mainly because agricultural productivity is poor. . . .

‘The solutions are not complex: higher yielding, disease- and pest-resistant varieties of plants, and fertilizer to improve played-out soil. These are the elements of any green revolution. Income from higher crop productivity can be invested in the purchase of a cow—a local bank offers a three-year bovine loan.

‘A farmer producing milk can go from $300 in annual income to $1,200. . . .

‘The promotion of agriculture—funding research on improved hybrids, training local companies in seed production, providing extension services to farmers—is among the best examples of long-term, bootstrap development. It is the kind of foreign assistance that encourages enterprise and independence, and that avoids the need for emergency famine relief. . . .

‘Donata Kuchawo demonstrates the hidden entrepreneurship found even among the poorest of the poor. Sometimes it only takes a cow to unleash it.’

Read the whole article in the Washington Post: In Malawi, the toll of U.S. budget-cutting, 14 March 2011.

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