PRISE2020-08-062020-08-062014-02-20http://hdl.handle.net/10625/59304Pastoralists and agro-pastoralists have been greatly impacted by the transformation from communal land to private ownership. County and national land use planners can provide critical support for climate-resilient pastoralist livelihoods through appropriate low-cost interventions such as wildlife or livestock corridors. The research explored the role of land ownership in reducing climate vulnerability and enhancing climate-resilient economic development in Kenya’s semi-arid lands (SAL). As well as climate change, pastoralists and agro-pastoralists face other drivers of change, including land tenure and land-use changes, population growth, sedentarization, rapid urbanization, globalization and conflict.application/pdfenLAND USEDRYLANDSCLIMATE CHANGE VULNERABILITYWILDLIFE CONSERVATIONSEMI-ARID REGIONSPASTORALISMPRIVATE OWNERSHIPCATTLEBEEFAGRICULTURAL POLICYKENYASOUTH OF SAHARAHow can ownership of and access to land drive climate-resilient economic development in Kenya's semi-arid lands?Policy Brief