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Participatory Rangeland Management (PRM) in Tanzania

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Participatory Rangeland Management (PRM) in Tanzania

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A poster summary on better managed rangelands and more resilient pastoral systems through participatory rangeland management (PRM) in Tanzania prepared by Fiona Flintan and Jason Sircely

A poster summary on better managed rangelands and more resilient pastoral systems through participatory rangeland management (PRM) in Tanzania prepared by Fiona Flintan and Jason Sircely

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Participatory Rangeland Management (PRM) in Tanzania

  1. 1.  PRM improves rangeland and livestock productivity, strengthening the governance and management of rangelands.  PRM improves relationships between pastoralists, other land users and local government by providing greater visibility to their land use, reducing land use conflicts and creating incentives for investments to improve land productivity.  The PRM process ensures women are included in community decision-making and granted greater access to and control over rangeland resources.  Participatory rangeland management plans incentivize communities to undertake activities such as removal of invasive species, rangeland restoration and planned grazing. Better managed rangelands and more resilient pastoral systems through participatory rangeland management (PRM) in Tanzania • Pastoral areas suffer from poor tenure security, weakened governance and institutions, lost/ fragmented grazing areas and blocked migration routes. • Climate change is worsening the situation, impacting livelihoods and rangeland productivity, reducing the resilience of pastoral systems and their ecosystems. • Communities and governments lack the capacity to deal with these challenges, reducing their ability to cope with drought and other crises. We thank all funders who support this research through their contributions to the CGIAR Trust Fund: www.cgiar.org/funders. This document is licensed for use under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence. December 2022 Fiona Flintan, ILRI f.flintan@cgiar.org Jason Sircely, ILRI j.sircely@cgiar.org Progress/outcomes Context Our innovative approach Participatory rangeland management (PRM): • Builds capacities of communities to improve rangeland management, good governance and the technical and planning capacities of government to support them. • Guides communities to coordinate and implement management practices they already use. • Encourages communities to reflect on and improve management practices and make decision processes more equitable and gender inclusive. Source: Flintan and Cullis (2010) Community mapping in Baringo. County female PRM facilitators are motivating women to be active participants in their community’s decision-making processes. Photo Marco Buemi/ILRI • 161,144 hectares of grazing land was secured through joint village land use planning in Kiteto district, Manyara region and is being improved through PRM • Certificates of customary rights of occupancy (CCROs) are being issued to groups of livestock keepers to secure the grazing lands. • Rangeland management committees have been established with more than 40% female representation • We work with the Ministry of Livestock and Fisheries Development to develop guidelines on PRM and open dialogue on the need for a more facilitating policy environment for PRM, including supporting policy and legislation. • PRM is now being upscaled to new village clusters. PRM has global application under the UN Decade of Ecosystem Restoration and the upcoming 2026 UN- designated Year of Rangelands and Pastoralists.

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