The League for Pastoral Peoples and Endogenous Livestock Development is an advocacy and support group for pastoralists who depend on common property resources. We work and conduct research with pastoral communities, primarily in India.
This website documents the challenges faced by pastoralists and facilitates networking among similar agencies.
| LPP's annual report for 2006 is now available online. The lead article, by LPP Project Coordinator Ilse Köhler-Rollefson, focuses on "Patents on animals: Preparing for Interlaken". The First International Technical Conference on Animal Genetic Resources will be held on 1-7 September 2007 in Interlaken, Switzerland. LPP has been heavily involved in preparing for this conference, helping organize pastoralists and small-scale livestock keepers to ensure their voice is heard. Download 2006 annual report 119 kb, 12 pages
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Item posted by Paul Mundy on Friday, May 18, 2007
| Reclaiming Livestock Keepers’ Rights to produce and have continued access to their diverse livestock breeds 2-page call for support for efforts to protect the rights of livestock keepers.
Download 106 kb Also available in French as: Reconquérir les droits des éleveurs de produire et de sécuriser leur accès aux races animales Download 108 kb |
Item posted by Paul Mundy on Friday, May 11, 2007
| The interdependence between pastoralists, breeds, access to the commons, and livelihoodsThis book by Ilse Köhler-Rollefson and the LIFE Network focuses on a key threat to the survival of pastoralists and their livestock breeds: the loss of access to grazing and water. Pastoralists are losing their traditional pasturelands for many reasons - new restrictions on grazing in nature reserves, the expansion of irrigated agriculture, expropriation by settled villagers, and the elimination of fallow land because of intensified cropping. Less grazing land means that pastoralists cannot maintain a herd large enough to be economic. Many are forced to give up livestock production altogether. That does not just mean the loss of livelihoods for the pastoralists themselves. It also means settled villagers can no longer rely on the hardy stock from pastoralists to pull their ploughs and provide them with meat and milk. And it spells doom for many valuable livestock breeds and the gene pool they represent. Based on years of research in rural India, this book has wide applicability to other parts of the world where pastoralism is important. It forms a valuable input to the First International Technical Conference on Animal Genetic Resources, to be held in Interlaken, Switzerland, in September 2007. Download:
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Item posted by Paul Mundy on Friday, May 04, 2007