Scaling Sustainable Land Managment Innovations: The African Highland Initiative Devolution Model
Benefits accruing from using sustainable land management (SLM) innovations including technologies, approaches and methods specifically in eastern Africa highlands do not match the scale of their adoption among rural poor communities inhabiting critical ecosystems of global importance. The African Hi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | African crop science journal 2013-12, Vol.21 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Benefits accruing from using sustainable land management (SLM)
innovations including technologies, approaches and methods specifically
in eastern Africa highlands do not match the scale of their adoption
among rural poor communities inhabiting critical ecosystems of global
importance. The African Highlands Initiative (AHI), an ecological
programme building on more than a decade legacy as an innovator towards
development of innovative methods and approaches, unveils an AHI
devolution model anchored in policy reforms involving transfer of
functions to more localised institutions that empowers stakeholders
towards scaling SLM innovations. This paper presents the model whose
focus is on multi-stakeholder engagements embedded in a structured
process comprising of drivers, facilitators, devolution governance,
outcomes and feedback systems. The model capitalises on Innovation
Platforms (IPs) to access a large consortium of actors, each playing
important roles at multi-scales, and further take advantage of the
benefits of decentralisations to leverage support and buy-in necessary
for operationalising an effective scaling strategy. Towards
operationalising the model, SLM scaling strategy developed and rolled
out in Ethiopia and Uganda is described, unpacking its five components:
(i) understanding local contexts; (ii) facilitating learning alliances;
(iii) monitoring performance; (iv) implementing tangible action
including creating enabling environment; and (v) continuous capacity
building. Achievements attributed to the model specific to Ethiopia and
Uganda include; a systematic strategy for 10 devolution structures
(IPs) at multi-scales mainstreamed under decentralised local government
authorities; enabling policy environment beyond capacity building;
institutional strengthening and human resource development and
increased allocation of resources to SLM by local government. Tangible
results in Ethiopia include: 1.24 ha fenced for regeneration, seed
bulking on 8 community nurseries; distribution of 62, 463 seedlings;
234 km of soil conservation structures; 2 bylaws with 608 households
benefiting from Integrated Natural Resource Management (INRM)
technologies. In Uganda results include distribution of 71,903 tree
seedlings, nurturing 219 seedlings in 6 community nurseries, building
capacity of 153 IP members in seed collection, two bylaws and
ordinance; as well as 8,435 ha regenerated. Policy recommendations in
support of the AHI devolution model include investment |
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ISSN: | 1021-9730 |