League for Pastoral Peoples and Endogenous Livestock Development

This website is dedicated to the pastoralists of the world and their itinerant spirit.

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.


What can we do to stop the fast erosion of domestic animal diversity?

Six experts from different parts of the world answer this question in interviews with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.

“Veterinary services have been privatized - drugs are too expensive”, says Thomas Loquang (left), a Ugandan livestock keeper and representative of the pastoralist community of Karamoja in Uganda. The community depends very much on indigenous knowledge for taking care of their livestock, including animal health and production. Thomas urges for support in conserving Karamoja’s indigenous breeds and strengthening livestock keepers' rights through better infrastructure and veterinary services.

Patrick Mulvaney of British NGO Practical Action says that livestock keepers' rights are needed to protect livestock and livelihoods.

Click here to listen to all six interviews.




Industry concentration study now in Spanish


Susanne Gura's groundbreaking 2007 study on "Livestock genetics companies: Concentration and proprietary strategies of an emerging power in the global food economy" is now available in Spanish.

Click here to download:




League joins Drynet

The League for Pastoral Peoples and Endogenous Livestock Development is a founder member of Drynet, a project focusing on:

  • Desertification, drylands and land degradation
  • Communities living in affected areas and their coping strategies
  • Efforts to combat desertification and land degradation due to unsustainable practices and climate change.

This European Union-funded project, launched on 17 June, the United Nations World Day to Combat Desertification, aims to strengthen civil society networks, such as farmers' collectives, indigenous groups, women's organizations, trade unions and non-governmental organizations with knowledge and visibility to influence dryland development policies in affected countries.

The League's Indian partner, Rajasthan-based Lokhit Pashu-Palak Sansthan, is also a founder member of Drynet.

Other partner organizations are from Iran, Turkey, Pakistan, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Mauritania, South Africa, Senegal, Kazakhstan, the Netherlands, and France. BothEnds, an organization based in the Netherlands, coordinates the project.

Click here to access the Drynet website.

Click here for more information. 17 kb

Questions? Send an e-mail to drynet@bothends.org or contact Danielle de Man at the Both ENDS office: +31 (0)20 623 0823




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