Strengthening Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems for Food and Nutrition Security and Low-emissions Development in Eastern and Southern Africa

Livestock production is a major livelihood in many parts of Africa, providing multiple benefits and uses that include milk, meat, payment of dowry, measure of wealth, draft power among others. In particular, extensive livestock systems support most of Africa’s livestock population, with 63%, 82% and 70% of the continent’s cattle, sheep and goats, respectively. Mostly, they are raised in climate-sensitive arid and semi-arid areas of Africa in subsistence level rain-fed systems. These systems experience environmental (land, water, ecosystem) degradation, economic (low investment, lack of access to inputs, credit, markets) and human and institutional capacity (poor infrastructure, advisory services) related constraints, often exacerbated by extreme weather events and climate change. As a result, shortage of feedstock is common, coupled with poor health and highly variable and low productivity. In Eastern and Southern African (ESA) countries, pastoralists and agro-pastoralists face critical challenges, including an inability to meet food and nutrition security (FNS) needs, and diminishing resilience and adaptive capacity against frequent climate (water and heat stress, droughts, diseases) and non-climate related shocks (economic shocks, conflict, migration). While livestock offers multiple benefits and uses, they are the largest source of agricultural greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in Africa, accounting for almost 80% of total agricultural emissions, and growing by about 3% per year. This project aims to support stakeholders engaged in extensive livestock systems in Eastern and Southern Africa to design and implement scalable sustainable interventions that promote adaptive capacity and food and nutrition security of men and women livestock keepers, while reducing GHG emissions from livestock production.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Auma, Joseph, Radeny, Maren A.O.
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa 2022-12
Subjects:livestock, food systems, nutrition, agriculture,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129149
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1291492023-09-15T12:25:35Z Strengthening Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems for Food and Nutrition Security and Low-emissions Development in Eastern and Southern Africa Auma, Joseph Radeny, Maren A.O. livestock food systems nutrition agriculture Livestock production is a major livelihood in many parts of Africa, providing multiple benefits and uses that include milk, meat, payment of dowry, measure of wealth, draft power among others. In particular, extensive livestock systems support most of Africa’s livestock population, with 63%, 82% and 70% of the continent’s cattle, sheep and goats, respectively. Mostly, they are raised in climate-sensitive arid and semi-arid areas of Africa in subsistence level rain-fed systems. These systems experience environmental (land, water, ecosystem) degradation, economic (low investment, lack of access to inputs, credit, markets) and human and institutional capacity (poor infrastructure, advisory services) related constraints, often exacerbated by extreme weather events and climate change. As a result, shortage of feedstock is common, coupled with poor health and highly variable and low productivity. In Eastern and Southern African (ESA) countries, pastoralists and agro-pastoralists face critical challenges, including an inability to meet food and nutrition security (FNS) needs, and diminishing resilience and adaptive capacity against frequent climate (water and heat stress, droughts, diseases) and non-climate related shocks (economic shocks, conflict, migration). While livestock offers multiple benefits and uses, they are the largest source of agricultural greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in Africa, accounting for almost 80% of total agricultural emissions, and growing by about 3% per year. This project aims to support stakeholders engaged in extensive livestock systems in Eastern and Southern Africa to design and implement scalable sustainable interventions that promote adaptive capacity and food and nutrition security of men and women livestock keepers, while reducing GHG emissions from livestock production. 2022-12 2023-03-02T13:16:47Z 2023-03-02T13:16:47Z Report Auma J, Radeny M. 2022. Strengthening Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems for Food and Nutrition Security and Low-emissions Development in Eastern and Southern Africa. AICCRA Inception Report. Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research in Africa (AICCRA). https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129149 en CC-BY-NC-4.0 Open Access 51 p. application/pdf Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa
institution CGIAR
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country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
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databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic livestock
food systems
nutrition
agriculture
livestock
food systems
nutrition
agriculture
spellingShingle livestock
food systems
nutrition
agriculture
livestock
food systems
nutrition
agriculture
Auma, Joseph
Radeny, Maren A.O.
Strengthening Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems for Food and Nutrition Security and Low-emissions Development in Eastern and Southern Africa
description Livestock production is a major livelihood in many parts of Africa, providing multiple benefits and uses that include milk, meat, payment of dowry, measure of wealth, draft power among others. In particular, extensive livestock systems support most of Africa’s livestock population, with 63%, 82% and 70% of the continent’s cattle, sheep and goats, respectively. Mostly, they are raised in climate-sensitive arid and semi-arid areas of Africa in subsistence level rain-fed systems. These systems experience environmental (land, water, ecosystem) degradation, economic (low investment, lack of access to inputs, credit, markets) and human and institutional capacity (poor infrastructure, advisory services) related constraints, often exacerbated by extreme weather events and climate change. As a result, shortage of feedstock is common, coupled with poor health and highly variable and low productivity. In Eastern and Southern African (ESA) countries, pastoralists and agro-pastoralists face critical challenges, including an inability to meet food and nutrition security (FNS) needs, and diminishing resilience and adaptive capacity against frequent climate (water and heat stress, droughts, diseases) and non-climate related shocks (economic shocks, conflict, migration). While livestock offers multiple benefits and uses, they are the largest source of agricultural greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in Africa, accounting for almost 80% of total agricultural emissions, and growing by about 3% per year. This project aims to support stakeholders engaged in extensive livestock systems in Eastern and Southern Africa to design and implement scalable sustainable interventions that promote adaptive capacity and food and nutrition security of men and women livestock keepers, while reducing GHG emissions from livestock production.
format Report
topic_facet livestock
food systems
nutrition
agriculture
author Auma, Joseph
Radeny, Maren A.O.
author_facet Auma, Joseph
Radeny, Maren A.O.
author_sort Auma, Joseph
title Strengthening Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems for Food and Nutrition Security and Low-emissions Development in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_short Strengthening Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems for Food and Nutrition Security and Low-emissions Development in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_full Strengthening Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems for Food and Nutrition Security and Low-emissions Development in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_fullStr Strengthening Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems for Food and Nutrition Security and Low-emissions Development in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed Strengthening Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems for Food and Nutrition Security and Low-emissions Development in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_sort strengthening adaptive capacity of extensive livestock systems for food and nutrition security and low-emissions development in eastern and southern africa
publisher Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa
publishDate 2022-12
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129149
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