Tackling degradation together : women’s groups in Sudan
Date
2012-12
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Publisher
Center for Learning on Sustainable Agriculture in the Netherlands (ILEIA)
Abstract
Eight women of the town of As-Subagh took the initiative to improve their community’s fodder production, while helping to restore degraded lands fenced off in their area. Initially the local government had fenced a large area of land nearby As-Subagh, trying to protect it from erosion. But the exclusively technical intervention of building a fence had negligible results. With the women’s involvement, the fenced land became a major source of rangeland seeds for natural dispersion and regeneration, both inside and outside the fence line, not only benefitting the group of women, but expanding into surrounding communities as well.
Description
This article resulted from a documentation workshop carried out by ILEIA in 2012 in Beirut, Lebanon for KariaNet, supported by IDRC and IFAD. The workshop aimed to strengthen the skills of Middle East and North Africa IFAD project staff to capture, analyse and disseminate practical experiences from the field. For more information, please visit www.ileia.org and www.karianet.org
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Media Article
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Keywords
SUDAN, BUTANA, RANGELANDS, WOMEN, COMMONS, WOMEN IN AGRICULTURE, WOMEN IN DEVELOPMENT, RURAL POVERTY, NORTH AFRICA, DROUGHT, DROUGHT RESISTANCE, FODDER, GRAZING, ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION, SOIL EROSION, KNOWLEDGE SHARING, KNOWLEDGE NETWORKS