Exploring the feasibility of implementing the P-PD approach in pastoral areas: Assessment in the Somali region of Ethiopia

Positive deviance refers to individuals or groups of livestock keepers achieving better outcomes than their peers with similar resources in livestock management in terms of securing livelihoods and overcoming the impact of climate change. Positive deviance is a well-researched field of study emergin...

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Autores principales: Habermann, Birgit, Worku, Tigist
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Livestock Research Institute 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168438
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author Habermann, Birgit
Worku, Tigist
author_browse Habermann, Birgit
Worku, Tigist
author_facet Habermann, Birgit
Worku, Tigist
author_sort Habermann, Birgit
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Positive deviance refers to individuals or groups of livestock keepers achieving better outcomes than their peers with similar resources in livestock management in terms of securing livelihoods and overcoming the impact of climate change. Positive deviance is a well-researched field of study emerging from public health research, originally in SE Asia (Zeitlin 1991, Marsh, Schroeder et al. 2004, Lapping, Marsh et al. 2016). The Pioneer Positive Deviance (P-PD) approach has been developed by a team at ILRI in the Programme for Climate Smart Livestock (PCSL) and the Livestock and Climate Initiative (Habermann, Crane et al. 2021, Habermann, Crane et al. 2021, Habermann, Crane et al. 2022, Habermann, Crane et al. 2022, Habermann, Gichuki et al. 2024) . It identifies and characterizes farmer-led innovations that support livestock keepers in livestock management and adaptation to climate change (Habermann, Crane et al. 2022). The approach has been tested mainly in mixed-crop livestock systems in Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda. In Ethiopia preliminary scoping in pastoral systems was done in Afar Region in 2019 to 2021.
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spelling CGSpace1684382025-01-01T02:12:38Z Exploring the feasibility of implementing the P-PD approach in pastoral areas: Assessment in the Somali region of Ethiopia Habermann, Birgit Worku, Tigist climate-smart agriculture pastoral society Positive deviance refers to individuals or groups of livestock keepers achieving better outcomes than their peers with similar resources in livestock management in terms of securing livelihoods and overcoming the impact of climate change. Positive deviance is a well-researched field of study emerging from public health research, originally in SE Asia (Zeitlin 1991, Marsh, Schroeder et al. 2004, Lapping, Marsh et al. 2016). The Pioneer Positive Deviance (P-PD) approach has been developed by a team at ILRI in the Programme for Climate Smart Livestock (PCSL) and the Livestock and Climate Initiative (Habermann, Crane et al. 2021, Habermann, Crane et al. 2021, Habermann, Crane et al. 2022, Habermann, Crane et al. 2022, Habermann, Gichuki et al. 2024) . It identifies and characterizes farmer-led innovations that support livestock keepers in livestock management and adaptation to climate change (Habermann, Crane et al. 2022). The approach has been tested mainly in mixed-crop livestock systems in Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda. In Ethiopia preliminary scoping in pastoral systems was done in Afar Region in 2019 to 2021. 2024-12-28 2024-12-31T19:10:27Z 2024-12-31T19:10:27Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168438 en Open Access application/pdf International Livestock Research Institute Habermann, Birgit, Worku, Tigist. 2024. Exploring the feasibility of implementing the P-PD approach in pastoral areas: Assessment in the Somali region of Ethiopia. Report. ILRI. Ethiopia
spellingShingle climate-smart agriculture
pastoral society
Habermann, Birgit
Worku, Tigist
Exploring the feasibility of implementing the P-PD approach in pastoral areas: Assessment in the Somali region of Ethiopia
title Exploring the feasibility of implementing the P-PD approach in pastoral areas: Assessment in the Somali region of Ethiopia
title_full Exploring the feasibility of implementing the P-PD approach in pastoral areas: Assessment in the Somali region of Ethiopia
title_fullStr Exploring the feasibility of implementing the P-PD approach in pastoral areas: Assessment in the Somali region of Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the feasibility of implementing the P-PD approach in pastoral areas: Assessment in the Somali region of Ethiopia
title_short Exploring the feasibility of implementing the P-PD approach in pastoral areas: Assessment in the Somali region of Ethiopia
title_sort exploring the feasibility of implementing the p pd approach in pastoral areas assessment in the somali region of ethiopia
topic climate-smart agriculture
pastoral society
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168438
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