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Participatory rangeland management (PRM): from concept to continental scaling
Author
Flintan, F
Otieno, K
Sircely, J
Nganga, I
Eba, B
Mukalo, I
Faustin, Z
Akilmali, A
Ngurumwa, P
Ouma, D
Olesikilal, B
Ebro, A
Okoth, J
Akiyaga, A
Gudina, D
Irwin, B
Publisher
XII International Rangeland Congress
Publication Year
2025
Body

Participatory rangeland management (PRM) is a step-by-step process that builds the capacities of pastoralist communities to improve the management, governance and restoration of their land and resources. It seeks to address the challenges that pastoral communities across Africa face including a lack of tenure security with an increasingly degrading resource base as pressures on land grow. Introduced in 2010, it is now being implemented across more than 2 million hectares in East Africa. Three impact pathway s were followed to reach this point – developing and piloting PRM, building capacities to implement PRM, and influencing a more enabling policy environment. However, though PRM in name can be easily scaled in terms of coverage, greater attention must be gi ven to maintaining its core principles and deepening community engagement and capacities. It requires a significant investment from all involved including sufficient time and funding to move at a pace that allows for capacity building of communities to lead the process, co-develop solutions and support policy and legislation improvements.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Additional Information
This paper is part of the larger XII International Rangelands Congress Proceedings. Page Numbers: 278-281. Theme: Theme 2 / Collaborative approach to grazing management
ISSN
978-0-646-72121-7
Conference Name
International Rangeland Congress
Collection
International Rangelands Congress
Keywords
Participatory rangeland management
pastoralism
restoration
planning
community