DR. SAVERIO KRÄTLI
Nomadic Peoples
The journal of the Commission on Nomadic Peoples
International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological
Sciences (IUAES)
& Associate Research Fellow
German Institute for Tropical and Subtropical Agriculture
and the Transdisciplinary and Social-ecological Landuse
Research (DITSL)
E-mail: saverio.kratli@gmail.com
ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Saverio-Kraetli
Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=sPa7TmEAAAAJ&hl=en
Areas of Expertise
Pastoralist livelihood strategies and production systems, particularly in Sub Saharan Africa, at the interface between producers, science, and development.
Brief Bio
I am a freelance researcher and consultant, and honorary editor of the peer reviewed journal Nomadic Peoples (since 2010). I have a hybrid background. I started with studying philosophy in Italy (Bologna). Then I moved to the UK to study anthropology of development. I worked for a few years at the Institute of Development Studies doing research on pastoralism East Africa, with Jeremy Swift, starting from Turkana (Kenya) and Karamoja (Uganda). Eventually I did a PhD in development studies with a research on cattle breeding amongst the Peul Wodaabe in Niger, one of the most specialised groups of mobile pastoralists in the world.
For the last 14 years I worked on pastoralism as a freelance, engaging with the whole spectrum of pastoral development agencies, from grassroots pastoral associations and local NGOs, to governmental, international and Bretton Wood organisations.
I have had a long collaboration with the International Institute for Environment and Development (UK), with which I developed the ‘Valuing Variability’ concept and I am now preparing a MOOC on ‘pastoralism in development’.
I also had long collaborations with the German Institute for Tropical and Subtropical Agriculture (DITSL), and with Tufts University (US) working on pastoralism in Sudan.
Since 2014 I have helped Misereor (Germany) and their partners in Ethiopia to build their capacity to work with people in pastoral systems. This has led to the publication of the Pastoral Development Orientation Framework; an online tool to help the critical analysis of the 2020 Ethiopia pastoral development policy; and the shortest introduction to pastoralism, a 2 minute animation developed in partnership with Vétérinaires sans Frontières Belgium and CELEP (the Coalition of European Lobbies for Eastern African Pastoralism).
Other main professional achievements include the evaluation of twenty years of water development interventions in pastoral regions of Chad by the French Development Agency (AFD), the joint evaluation FAO’s and IFAD’s Engagement in Pastoral Development (2003-2013), and the evaluation of the FAO-based Pastoralist Knowledge Hub. I have been the lead author of IFAD’s first How to do Note on Engaging with pastoralists , and (with Ilse Köhler-Rollefson) of the just published FAO paper Pastoralism: Making Variability Work.
I have worked with pastoralists in Niger, Chad, Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia, Sudan, Tanzania and Mongolia.
I am committed to a trans-disciplinary perspective, which I have used in research on issues of conflict, education, livelihood and policy analysis, pastoral mobility, and total economic evaluation of pastoral systems. Current research interests focus on the use of environmental variability by dryland production systems, and the gap between drylands/pastoral development theory and methodologies.
I currently completing the preparation of a brief on ‘pastoralism, resilience and climate change’ for GIZ, the German development agency.
Publications (Weblink only), if any:
Krätli S., Kaufmann B., Roba H., Hiernaux P., Li W., Easdale M.C., Hülsebusch C. 2015. A House Full of Trap Doors. Identifying barriers to resilient drylands in the toolbox of pastoral development, Discussion Paper, International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), London.