25 November 2011
Managing a country's
natural resources so that they provide the basis for sustainable
rural development is a huge challenge. In Lesotho, land is the key
resource sustaining rural livelihoods across the country; among
other goods and services, it provides communities with food and
water, fodder for their animals, and biomass for home heating and
cooking. If peoples' needs for these goods and services are to be
sustainably met, then land needs to be carefully managed and
trade-offs made.
Lesotho's natural resources are
presently heavily utilised and poorly managed. This has led to
environmental degradation and reducing livelihoods standards. If
current trends of natural resource degradation continue, it will
become more and more difficult for communities to meet their basic
needs.
The problem of Sustainable Land
Management in Lesotho is not primarily a technical one but a
governance one. The challenge is to establish locally appropriate
land governance systems. There is good local knowledge of what
systems work and what do not but little local involvement in the
management decisions regarding local land. At a workshop held in
Maseru in November 2011, stakeholders agreed a model for the
governance of land in Lesotho based on the decentralisation of
management decisions regarding land to local community user groups.
This model is the result of extensive
community consultation and piloting, and input from central
government. It is hoped that through the decentralisation of land
governance, improving livestock offtake and providing alternative
income opportunities to communities the load on the landscape will
be reduced to more sustainable levels.
Having agreed a model for Sustainable
Land Management in Lesotho, piloting measures are to be intensified
with a view to demonstrating improved landscape performance. In
addition, an investment programme for land management will be framed
that addresses the multi-sectoral nature of the challenge. This is
expected to encompass follow-up projects on livestock registration,
livestock marketing, rural income generation and improved national
monitoring of processes of biophysical change.
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Some of the
Stakeholders in discussion regarding the model |
The
land which is very dull and almost dead and it is
hoped that the model will help |
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