Policy brief

From risk to resilience: grounding innovation in pastoralist realities

This study investigates pastoralists’ perceptions of the risks they face and how this influences adoption of innovations.

Publisher SPARC
By Wendy Chamberlin Tigist Kebede Carmen Jaquez
Supporting livelihoods and markets Africa

Humanitarian and development often encourage pastoralists to adopt innovations they believe will benefit pastoralists. Despite a multitude of innovations being introduced each year, sustained adoption by pastoralists is limited. Introduced innovations often reflect limited understanding of adaptations used by pastoralists. Innovations that include feedback mechanisms and iteration during the design and testing phase experience greater adoption when introduced in new areas.

SPARC researchers have carried out 23 studies on innovations. We reviewed these studies and interviewed research leads to identify common findings on pastoralists’ perceptions of risk.

Findings include:

Policy implications:

Externally introduced innovations will only be relevant if designed to complement the many existing ways that pastoralists gather information, prioritise their needs, and make use of their social networks. 

By understanding both pastoralist perceived risks and what they seek to protect, innovators and external actors can better identify solutions that will genuinely support pastoralists to adapt to hazards. 

Recommendations include:

A woman standing with a goat in front of a blue sky dotted with white clouds
Woman travelling to market to sell goat. Degehabur, Somali Region, Ethiopia
Credit E. Millstein 2024

Source URL: https://www.sparc-knowledge.org/publications-resources/risk-resilience-innovation-pastoralist-realities