Policy brief

Targeting individuals or communities? Learnings from AfriScout on improving pastoralists’ well-being

This brief highlights key learnings for policymakers from research that explores the causal impact of two intervention models designed to support pastoralists in Ethiopia and Kenya.

Par Sophie Turnbull Miguel Uribe Javier Madrazo
Promoting innovative solutions Supporting livelihoods and markets Understanding land and conflict Working in a changing climate Gender equality and social inclusion Africa Ethiopia Kenya

Rapid changes in East Africa's arid and semi-arid regions, caused by climate-related disasters, armed conflict, livestock diseases, macroeconomic shocks, and increasing population, are making pastoralism an increasingly precarious livelihood. There is a critical need for innovations that enhance pastoralists’ resilience and adaptability.

To this end, Global Communities’ AfriScout programme supports pastoralists through two intervention models: AfriScout Regen (implemented in Ethiopia), providing intensive, localized grazing support at a community level following an adaptive multi-paddock approach; and AfriScout Steward (implemented in Kenya), an app providing satellite and crowd-sourced information on rangeland conditions to inform grazing and migration decisions.

To better understand the causal impacts of the two AfriScout models, SPARC partner Causal Design conducted a two-year, mixed-methods impact evaluation. The evaluation sought to identify the attributable outcomes of AfriScout on pastoralist decision-making and subsequent impacts on rangeland conditions and herd conditions. This policy brief summarises key findings of the study and highlights learnings from each model for future program design and policymakers.

Research findings are:

Policy implications are:

These findings indicate that intervention design and funding must consider the cost-benefit analysis of each approach (information sharing vs localised advisory support). Consideration should be made in particular to local conditions (such as digital infrastructure and existing decision-making processes) in order to best tailor approaches to meet desired objectives. 

Find out more about innovations for pastoralists and agro-pastoralists in drylands on the SPARC Innovation Dashboard.

Two men stand side by side looking at a mobile phone that one is holding. A herd of cows is in the background
AfriScout Steward training in Mosiro, Kajiado County, Kenya, 2025 - Photo by Brian Odhiambo

 


Source URL: https://www.sparc-knowledge.org/node/500