Pastoral Livestock Marketing in Eastern Africa: Research and Policy ChallengesJohn G. McPeak, Peter D. Little Intermediate Technology Publications, 2006 - 288 pages An in-depth, evidence-based investigation of livestock marketing in Eastern Africa which approaches the issues from a variety of disciplinary perspectives including anthropology, economics, geography, and rangeland ecology. Editors John G. McPeak and Peter D. Little present current findings on how livestock markets in this area operate, describe policy options that help markets function more effectively, and identify topics meriting further research. The issues are examined at a variety of levels (household, market, national, and international), and many of the authors place emphasis on cross-border trade: an area not currently well understood but of substantial economic importance. The book is written in a clear, straightforward style and, though the authors come from a variety of fields, jargon and discipline-specific terms are kept to a minimum. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 72
Page 9
... volume This collection of studies on livestock marketing is the outcome of a project initiated and funded by the ... volume . In addition , we contacted other researchers active in this area and asked if they would be interested in ...
... volume This collection of studies on livestock marketing is the outcome of a project initiated and funded by the ... volume . In addition , we contacted other researchers active in this area and asked if they would be interested in ...
Page 248
... volume of marketed animals may stay the same or change only marginally . In short , the studies of this volume indi- cate it is easier to identify policies and market opportunities that allow pro- ducers to ' sell better ' rather than ...
... volume of marketed animals may stay the same or change only marginally . In short , the studies of this volume indi- cate it is easier to identify policies and market opportunities that allow pro- ducers to ' sell better ' rather than ...
Page 251
... volume can be used as a mechanism to regulate herd size appears to be getting it completely back- wards . Rather , the evidence suggests changing herd size is one of the main driving forces behind changing market volumes , and if market ...
... volume can be used as a mechanism to regulate herd size appears to be getting it completely back- wards . Rather , the evidence suggests changing herd size is one of the main driving forces behind changing market volumes , and if market ...
Contents
Householdlevel livestock marketing behaviour | 15 |
1 Site descriptions | 18 |
6 Births and purchases in TLUs across species by quarter | 24 |
Copyright | |
18 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
abattoirs Addis Ababa Agriculture Aklilu animals average Barrett body condition Borana border breed brokers buyers camels cash cattle cattle prices cent coping strategies costs cross-border livestock trade cross-border trade Development drought eastern Africa economic ELMI estimated Ethiopia fees Gabra Garissa goats herd sizes herders Horn of Africa household herd impact important increased institutions interventions Jijiga Kajiado Kajiado District Kariobangi kilogram live weight livelihoods livestock marketing livestock prices livestock production LMIS Maasai Maasai Zebu Mahmoud Mariakani market day market participants market prices marketing chain Marsabit District McPeak meat Mombasa Moyale Nairobi North Horr northern Kenya PARIMA pastoral areas pastoralists price per kilogram producers Program purchase ranches rangelands region risk role sector sell sellers sheep slaughter small stock sold Somali livestock southern Ethiopia Suguta Table Tanzania terminal markets tion traders transactions transport variable veterinary volume West Pokot District Zaal Zebu