Government of Tanzania uptake joint village land use planning: tool to secure shared grazing lands across administrative borders in pastoral areas
Pastoralists have poor tenure security and are often excluded from land-related decision- making processes. They are poorly equipped to protect their lands from sale or encroachment. Land use planning that maintains the integrity of the pastoral system and the rangelands on which pastoralism depends...
| Autores principales: | , , |
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| Formato: | Brief |
| Lenguaje: | Inglés |
| Publicado: |
CGIAR System Organization
2024
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| Materias: | |
| Acceso en línea: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172581 |
| _version_ | 1855542991523938304 |
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| author | Flintan, Fiona E. Deus, Kalenzi Olesikilal, Birikaa |
| author_browse | Deus, Kalenzi Flintan, Fiona E. Olesikilal, Birikaa |
| author_facet | Flintan, Fiona E. Deus, Kalenzi Olesikilal, Birikaa |
| author_sort | Flintan, Fiona E. |
| collection | Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace) |
| description | Pastoralists have poor tenure security and are often excluded from land-related decision- making processes. They are poorly equipped to protect their lands from sale or encroachment. Land use planning that maintains the integrity of the pastoral system and the rangelands on which pastoralism depends is highly complex. Developing appropriate approaches for land use planning has proved challenging for many local and national governments. Where they have been developed, implementation of VLUPs has also often been restricted due to limited funding, skills and capacities. Since 2010, the Sustainable Rangeland Management Project achieved significant progress in village land use planning. This was led by the International Land Coalition and International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), with technical support from ILRI, including strengthening tools such as Participatory Rangeland Resource Mapping. A 2021 report on lessons learned from the SRMP highlighted the need for a concerted effort to include less visible groups, such as women and if JVLUP was to be scaled up, to improve the enabling environment. In 2022, the Livestock and Climate Initiative took up JVLUP to strengthen and scale it. |
| format | Brief |
| id | CGSpace172581 |
| institution | CGIAR Consortium |
| language | Inglés |
| publishDate | 2024 |
| publishDateRange | 2024 |
| publishDateSort | 2024 |
| publisher | CGIAR System Organization |
| publisherStr | CGIAR System Organization |
| record_format | dspace |
| spelling | CGSpace1725812025-01-31T02:14:36Z Government of Tanzania uptake joint village land use planning: tool to secure shared grazing lands across administrative borders in pastoral areas Flintan, Fiona E. Deus, Kalenzi Olesikilal, Birikaa pastoralism land use Pastoralists have poor tenure security and are often excluded from land-related decision- making processes. They are poorly equipped to protect their lands from sale or encroachment. Land use planning that maintains the integrity of the pastoral system and the rangelands on which pastoralism depends is highly complex. Developing appropriate approaches for land use planning has proved challenging for many local and national governments. Where they have been developed, implementation of VLUPs has also often been restricted due to limited funding, skills and capacities. Since 2010, the Sustainable Rangeland Management Project achieved significant progress in village land use planning. This was led by the International Land Coalition and International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), with technical support from ILRI, including strengthening tools such as Participatory Rangeland Resource Mapping. A 2021 report on lessons learned from the SRMP highlighted the need for a concerted effort to include less visible groups, such as women and if JVLUP was to be scaled up, to improve the enabling environment. In 2022, the Livestock and Climate Initiative took up JVLUP to strengthen and scale it. 2024-12-27 2025-01-30T19:17:00Z 2025-01-30T19:17:00Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172581 en Open Access application/pdf CGIAR System Organization F. Flintan; Kalenzi, D; Olesikilal, B; (2024) Government of Tanzania uptake joint village land use planning: tool to secure shared grazing lands across administrative borders in pastoral areas. Montpellier: CGIAR |
| spellingShingle | pastoralism land use Flintan, Fiona E. Deus, Kalenzi Olesikilal, Birikaa Government of Tanzania uptake joint village land use planning: tool to secure shared grazing lands across administrative borders in pastoral areas |
| title | Government of Tanzania uptake joint village land use planning: tool to secure shared grazing lands across administrative borders in pastoral areas |
| title_full | Government of Tanzania uptake joint village land use planning: tool to secure shared grazing lands across administrative borders in pastoral areas |
| title_fullStr | Government of Tanzania uptake joint village land use planning: tool to secure shared grazing lands across administrative borders in pastoral areas |
| title_full_unstemmed | Government of Tanzania uptake joint village land use planning: tool to secure shared grazing lands across administrative borders in pastoral areas |
| title_short | Government of Tanzania uptake joint village land use planning: tool to secure shared grazing lands across administrative borders in pastoral areas |
| title_sort | government of tanzania uptake joint village land use planning tool to secure shared grazing lands across administrative borders in pastoral areas |
| topic | pastoralism land use |
| url | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172581 |
| work_keys_str_mv | AT flintanfionae governmentoftanzaniauptakejointvillagelanduseplanningtooltosecuresharedgrazinglandsacrossadministrativebordersinpastoralareas AT deuskalenzi governmentoftanzaniauptakejointvillagelanduseplanningtooltosecuresharedgrazinglandsacrossadministrativebordersinpastoralareas AT olesikilalbirikaa governmentoftanzaniauptakejointvillagelanduseplanningtooltosecuresharedgrazinglandsacrossadministrativebordersinpastoralareas |