Scaling up successful practices for pro-poor development projects involving goats: First outputs of a comparative study

Published Date
September 30, 2014
Type
Journal Article
Scaling up successful practices for pro-poor development projects involving goats: First outputs of a comparative study
Authors:
Jean-Paul Dubeuf
Ramkumar Bendapudi, Dilip Bhandari, Juan Capote, Remedios Carrasco-Sanchez, İrfan Daskiran, Vinícius Pereira Guimarães, Luis Iniguez, Nazan Koluman-Darcan, Christie Peacock, Antonio Rota, Barbara Rischkowsky, Lucia Sepe

Goat livestock is generally considered as an efficient activity for smallholders to eradicate
poverty in many situations. More and more projects are submitted for donors who have
still few references and data to evaluate if these proposals could be successful or not.
A study has been initiated to scale up successful practices. It has been based on Knowledge
Harvesting and comparative analysis of several projects around the world. Discussions and
focus groups were organized as parts of a seminar during the 11th International Conference
on Goats. The general characteristics of goat activities and for each commodity and key
success factors have been identified and described. Proposals were elaborated and debated
to go forward and propose operational tools to support project donors and designers. A
project and investment typology will be built and a goat value chain tool kit will be developed
during a write shop. The discussions have enhanced the importance of a cost-benefits
analysis and planning return on investments within the project.

Citation:
Jean-Paul Dubeuf, Ramkumar Bendapudi, Dilip Bhandari, Juan Capote, Remedios Carrasco-Sanchez, İrfan Daskiran, Vinícius Pereira Guimarães, Luis Iniguez, Nazan Koluman-Darcan, Christie Peacock, Antonio Rota, Barbara Rischkowsky, Lucia Sepe. (30/9/2014). Scaling up successful practices for pro-poor development projects involving goats: First outputs of a comparative study. Small Ruminant Research, 121 (1), pp. 146-156.
Keywords:
goat development
poor economics
development
monitoring
millennium development goals