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Community-Based Animal Health Workers in Pastoralist Areas of Kenya

A Study on Selection Processes, Impact and Sustainability








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    Document
    Community-based animal health workers (cahws) In pastoralist areas of kenya: A study on selection processes, impact and sustainability 2003
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    Following the collapse of public services in Kenya in the 1980s, including veterinary services, alternatives have been sought to deliver animal health services in arid and semi-arid areas of Kenya. Several organisations including NGOs started new approaches such as “Communitybased Animal Health” (CAH) systems. These programmes have had different levels of success after the organisation pulls out. One of the reasons proposed to explain this is the selection process of the Community-based Animal H ealth Workers (CAHWs) whose qualities do not always suit communities as they are imposed hierarchically through local authorities. Several studies have been undertaken in the human health field in relation to community workers behavioural patterns and community health programmes’ sustainability. This type of research has, however, never been performed in the animal health field.
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    Booklet
    Linking community-based animal health services with natural resource conflict mitigation in the Abyei Administrative Area 2017
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    The Abyei Administrative Area (AAA) is a contested zone located on the central border between South Sudan and Sudan. Its status has remained unresolved since South Sudan seceded from Sudan in 2011, and the governments failed to agree on the border division. A United Nations peacekeeping mission, the United Nations Interim Security Force for Abyei (UNISFA), has since monitored the situation. It is entrusted with overseeing demilitarisation and maintaining security in the area. Mistrust and lack of dialogue have been critical components of this conflict. FAO has played a key role in initiating and facilitating a process focused on dialogue and building social cohesion at grassroots level, contributing to wider sustaining peace initiatives. FAO identified a window of opportunity through the technical delivery of community-based animal health veterinary services (embedded in an agricultural livelihood support strategy), in an effort to improve inter-community relations and contribute to s ustaining peace objectives.
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    Book (series)
    Animal Health Policy and Practice: Scaling-up Community-based Animal Health Systems, Lessons from Human Health 2005
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    This is the 22nd of a series of Working Papers prepared for the Pro-Poor Livestock Policy Initiative (PPLPI). The purpose of these papers is to explore issues related to livestock development in the context of poverty alleviation. Livestock is vital to the economies of many developing countries. Animals are a source of food, more specifically protein for human diets, income, employment and possibly foreign exchange. For low income producers, livestock can serve as a store of wealth, provide drau ght power and organic fertiliser for crop production and a means of transport. Consumption of livestock and livestock products in developing countries, though starting from a low base, is growing rapidly.

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