Journal of Agriculture and Rural Development in the Tropics and Subtropics (May 2020)

Scaling up community-based goat breeding programmes via multi-stakeholder collaboration

  • Wilson Kaumbata,
  • Helen Nakimbugwe,
  • Aynalem Haile,
  • Liveness Banda,
  • Gábor Mészáros,
  • Timothy Gondwe,
  • M. J. Woodward-Greene,
  • Benjamin D. Rosen,
  • Curtis P. Van Tassell,
  • Johann Sölkner,
  • Maria Wurzinger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17170/kobra-202005281298
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 121, no. 1
pp. 99 – 112

Abstract

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Community-based livestock breeding programmes (CBBPs) have emerged as a potential approach to implement sustainable livestock breeding in smallholder systems. In Malawi and Uganda, goat CBBPs were introduced to improve production and productivity of indigenous goats through selective breeding. Scaling up CBBPs have recently received support due to evidence-based results from current implementation and results of CBBPs implemented in other regions of the world. This paper explores strategies for scaling up goat CBBPs in Malawi and Uganda, and documents experiences and lessons learned during implementation of the programme. A number of stakeholders supporting goat-based interventions for improving smallholders’ livelihoods exists. This offers an opportunity for different actors to work together by pooling financial resources and technical expertise for establishment and sustainability of goat CBBPs. Scaling up strategies should be an integral part of the pilot design hence dissemination partners need to be engaged during the design and inception stages of the pilot CBBPs. Creation of self-sustaining CBBPs requires early collaborative programme planning, meaningful investment and long-term concerted and coordinated efforts by collaborating partners. Permanently established actors, like government agencies and research and training institutions, are better placed to coordinate such efforts. The overall goal of the scaling up programme should be creation of a financially sustainable system, in which smallholders are able, on their own, to transact and sustain operations of their local breeding institutions using locally generated revenue/ resources. Since CBBP scaling up is a ‘learning by doing process’, an effective monitoring and evaluation system should be an integral part of the process.

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