Community-based rangeland management in Tataouine, south-east Tunisia: Institutional settings to revive traditional land restoration “Gdel” (original) (raw)

Crop–livestock systems transformation in the semiarid zones of North Africa over a decade: approach and case-study in Southern Tunisia

The Journal of Agricultural Science

Understanding and representing the transformation of agricultural production systems has attracted increasing interest due to its importance for identifying drivers of changes and coping mechanisms in response to global challenges. These challenges are all the most pressing in North African countries exposed to a dramatic reduction in rainfall and increasing temperatures that affect sustainability in more than half of this semi-arid territory. This paper describes an improved way to understand such transformations through a cross-cutting analysis of crop–livestock system indicators over a period of 10 years in one community in Southern Tunisia. Our methodology is divided into four steps: (i) systems identification, (ii) indicator-based assessment of system crop–livestock sustainability, (iii) hierarchical clustering to identify sustainable intensification (SI)-based farm types and, finally, (iv) analysis of trajectories of these farm types. Results showed that the sustainability of ...

FAO Regional Workshop On IMPROVEMENT OF SUSTAINABLE SMALL RUMINANT PRODUCTION IN THE NEAR EAST Tunisia , 2 – 4 November 2009 How to approach the role of small ruminant production in poverty reduction and livelihood-Proposal of a methodological guide

2010

Many research or development studies underline the crucial role of small ruminant (SR) activities in the non tropical dry areas of world, and in particular in the Near East and North Africa (NENA) region. With camels, they are considered as key components of production systems over much of this vast region, which is characterized by water scarcity and erratic rainfall. SR activities may constitute the main remunerative activity or at least a pillar to ensure the viability of a large number of families in the region, particularly in remote areas. Some studies proposed to estimate the monetary contribution of SR activities in the household net income. But few studies analyze the contribution of SR activity in terms of poverty reduction and livelihood improvement. The reasons are numerous but one of them is the difficulty to apprehend the multiple and complex contributions of livestock activity to the household economy through their direct and indirect products, the intra-annual and in...

In the search for innovative agroecological farming practices in irrigated landscapes of North Africa: Case of Kairouan plain in Central Tunisia. PS-7.3-03

2018

Irrigated agriculture is instrumental for the economy and employment in North Africa countries. However, farmers in the Maghreb region face, on the one hand, multiple environmental and climatic risks, and on the other, economic constraints that, combined together, can lead to the vulnerability of these rural populations. Assuming that strong capacities of adaptation and innovation potentials exist within small-scale irrigated farming systems, this study aimed to identify and characterize existing eco-efficient and resilient farming practices in the Kairouan irrigated plain in Central Tunisia. The latter is entirely cultivated, with a wide variety of crop types such as market gardening, arboriculture and cereals. Representative of small-scale family farming systems in the irrigated plains of Tunisia, this study site lends well to work on the characterization of agroecological practices in a semi-arid irrigated environment. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with farmers, first...

Research for Development Approaches in the Mixed Crop-Livestock Systems of the Ethiopian Highlands

Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems, 2023

This paper presents processes and success stories that emerged from the Research for Development project of Africa RISING in the Ethiopia Highlands. The project has tested a combination of participatory tools at multiple levels, with systems thinking and concern for sustainable and diversified livelihoods. Bottom-up approaches guided the selection of technological interventions that can address community priority farming system challenges, leading to higher uptake levels and increased impact. Key to this was joint learning, appropriate selection of technologies, and the creation of an enabling environment such as forming farmers' research groups, establishing innovation platforms, and capacity development concerning institutional and technical innovations. The paper concludes by identifying key lessons that focus more on matching innovations with community needs and geographies, systems orientation/integration of innovations, stepwise approaches to enhance the adoption of innovations, documentation of farmers' capacity of modifying innovations, building successful partnerships and facilitation of wider scaling of innovations for future implementation of agricultural research for development projects. The funding organization for this work is USAID with a grant code AID-BFS-G-11-00002, World Bank through Accelerating the Impact of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa (AICCRA) project, and funders for Mixed Farming Systems (MFS) One CGIAR initiative. Ethics statements Studies involving animal subjects Generated Statement: No animal studies are presented in this manuscript. Studies involving human subjects Generated Statement: No human studies are presented in this manuscript. Inclusion of identifiable human data Generated Statement: No potentially identifiable human images or data is presented in this study.