Technical report

Supporting pastoralists through AfriScout Steward and Regen: Impact evaluation

This report evaluates AfriScout Steward, a digital app used in Kenya that provides crowd-sourced data on rangelands, and AfriScout Regen, an app that provides intensive grazing support in Ethiopia.

Publisher SPARC
By Miguel Uribe Sophie Turnbull 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 increasingly precarious. 

Innovations to enhance pastoralists’ resilience are needed.

To this end, Global Communities’ AfriScout programme supports pastoralists through two interventions. AfriScout Regen (in Ethiopia) provides direct technical support to communities. This support builds on and improves traditional grazing practices so that livestock movement promotes vegetation regeneration. AfriScout Steward (in Kenya), provides satellite and crowd-sourced information on rangeland conditions through a mobile phone app, to inform grazing and migration decisions.

SPARC partner Causal Design produced this report, with accompanying appendices, after carrying out a two-year, mixed-methods impact evaluation to identify the attributable outcomes of AfriScout on pastoralist decision-making and subsequent impacts on rangeland and herd conditions.

 

Findings

 

Policy implications

Our results contribute novel insights into the effectiveness of digital tools for migration decisions and the impact of regenerative grazing practices in developing countries, while also highlighting critical implementation challenges such as information spillovers.

Our findings show the importance of tailoring interventions to local context, above all how pastoralists share information.

Policy makers should consider local context, tailoring interventions to ensure their success. They should also consider trade-offs between impact, scalability, and budget when designing interventions for pastoralists.

 

Cattle are being herded by a young man
Kenyan Countryside - Image by Ninara via Wikicommons - CC BY 2.0

Source URL: https://www.sparc-knowledge.org/publications-resources/afriscout-steward-regen-impact-evaluation-technical-report-appendices