Ethiopia’s Somali Region, Afder Zone, Hargelle Woreda, is an area frequently affected by droughts in the Horn of Africa. The woreda is predominantly inhabited by pastoralist and agro-pastoralist communities, with approximately 80% of the population relying solely on livestock rearing for their livelihood. Hargelle is also classified as a disaster-prone area that experiences annual episodes of severe drought. In recent years, the woreda has faced at least one severe drought annually, which has further depleted local livelihoods and increased community vulnerabilities to climate-related hazards.
Islamic Relief Worldwide (IRW), with funding from the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) under the UK Aid Match (UKAM) programme, which is matched by Islamic Relief UK implemented the project “Reduced vulnerability and strengthening the capacity of pastoralist households to withstand drought shock in Ethiopia” from December 2021 to February 2025.
The evaluation aims to assess the project’s overall contribution to improving drought resilience, livelihoods, and adaptive capacity among pastoralist households, while identifying the most effective interventions and causal pathways that have driven measurable and sustained change at community level.I The evaluation seeks to generate rigorous and credible evidence of impact, distil actionable learning on what works in building resilience in pastoralist contexts, and inform the design, scaling, and strategic direction of future programming for IRE, IRW, and FCDO-funded initiatives.
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