Land, Water and Livelihoods: Watershed Movement in Tigray

20 years ago, Tigray was one of the most water-stressed, food-insecure and impoverished regions in Ethiopia. Around that time, the regional and federal governments decided that the way out of the situation was to pursue watershed-based ecological restoration.

The strategy seems to be working: soil quality has improved, water availability has increased, vegetative cover has grown several-fold, production of food is higher and productivity of farmland has been enhanced. The obvious knock-on effect has been a substantial decrease in poverty and improved nutrition.

The Tigray story could have lessons for all of us. This video is a preliminary look at what is widely called Tigray’s “Watershed Movement.” We would do well to look at the phenomenon more closely, for lessons relevant to our contexts.

More info:
Produced by: TheWaterChannel
Year: 2011
Language: Tigrinia, English (with English subtitles)

Subscribe to our Newsletter
Dossier
Uncategorized  
Tags
water management watershed movement participation people restoration. tigray development TWCdocu ecological TWCprod holistic use land wahara livelihoods  
Date
May 15, 2020  
Views
 
Language
 
Region
 
Produced by