Community Mobilization, Design and Partnership Arrangements in Conservancies Enabling Livestock Based Economies in Kenya to Adapt to Climate Change: A Review of PES from Wildlife Tourism as a Climate Change Adaptation Option ILRI, Nairobi, 15 February 2012 Dickson ole Kaelo, Basecamp Foundation Kenya Department of Land Resource Management & Agricultural Technology, University of Nairobi
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Community mobilization, design and partnership arrangements in conservancies
Presented by Dickson ole Kaelo at the Workshop on Enabling Livestock Based Economies in Kenya to Adapt to Climate Change: A Review of PES from Wildlife Tourism as a Climate Change Adaptation Option, ILRI, Nairobi, 15 February 2012
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Community Mobilization, Design and Partnership Arrangements in Conservancies
Enabling Livestock Based Economies in Kenya to Adapt to Climate Change: A Review of PES from Wildlife Tourism as a
Climate Change Adaptation Option ILRI, Nairobi, 15 February 2012
Dickson ole Kaelo, Basecamp Foundation Kenya
Department of Land Resource Management & Agricultural Technology, University of Nairobi
Community Mobilization
• Why Mobilize
• Understanding the community
• Understanding the issue (s)
• Facilitating open Dialogue
• The shared vision, the obstacle to the attainment of the
vision, the historical challenges
The role of Research and Research Dissemination – Reto o Reto project
The motivation• Government Policy – e.g KWS Policy for
community areas• A conservation organization e.g AWF, WWF,
ACC• Tourism operator(s) – self motivated or
response to opinion leader(s) request • Importing lessons from ‘successful’ case
studies• Lessons e.g learning from past mistakes
Setting the Agenda – Problem analysis
The Road to a Conservancy
Community Mobilization/readiness Phase1. Community Voicing
2. Informal & formal Consultations
3. The trigger/catalyst
4. Community negotiators
5. Conservancy Boundary setting
6. Community Mobilization – general information meetings
7. Formation of community committees and subgroups – Representation