ADIS Participates in the 2018 Kenya Pastoral Week hosted by Kajiado County
UoN Open Day
Kibwezi tree Planting- Mr. Katuva
Kibwezi rangeland reseeding
2nd Annual Rangeland Congress 2016
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The National level paper presentation seminar on Early warning and food security forum
Pasture Week in Marsabit County
The pasture week aimed to inaugurate pasture production demonstrations- land preparation and broadcasting of the grass seeds
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Fodder Production Training
Farmers learning to construct a semi-circular band, a micro-structure for rainwater harvesting and conservation in Wajir County
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Climate Change Adaptation Workshop
National Dialogue on Policy Frameworks for Climate Change Adaptation, Disaster Risk Reduction, and Rangeland Management and Governance in Kenya’s Rangelands
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CSDES LAUNCHES THE GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS (GIS) LAB AT CAVS, UoN.
This essay looks at Somali oral poetry, using poetry now committed to writing primarily from B. W. Andrzejewski and I. M. Lewis’s Somali Poetry: An Introduction, Basher Goth’s “Abdi Sinimoo and the Balwo Legacy,” Zainab Mohamed Jama’s “Fighting to Be Heard: Somali Women’s Poetry,” and Margaret Laurence’s A Tree for Poverty: Somali Poetry and Prose . Identifying the main genres of the poetry and discussing, with examples of poems, themes the poetry deals with, the essay shows that the beauty of the poetry debunks a stereotype of the Somali as a people bent on conflict, in the process forgetting the intense passion they exhibit in their poetry—whether it is passion for war and peace or whether it is passion for virtue and love.