Welcome! You've reached the online space for the Gender and Livestock Data Community of Practice. You are welcome to explore our content. Become a member to join discussions and events.
To become a member
Step 1: Register for the platform
Please sign up to the LD4D OpenSocial platform.
You will need to create a password and use it to log in.
Step 2: Become a member of the Gender Group
The gender group is a members-only group within the platform. Once you are logged in to LD4D OpenSocial, click the yellow “Request to Join” button.
The Gender and Livestock Data Community of Practice aims to improve understanding about collecting, analyzing and interpreting livestock and gender data.
Who we are
The CoP is open to anyone working on livestock development and gender, including animal health professionals and researchers, program directors, Monitoring, Learning and Evaluation experts, and anyone interested in making livestock development projects more gender equitable and impactful.
Why join us?
Connect with other members to learn from shared experiences, both positive and negative. You can choose and discuss the topics you want to learn about. We host events presentations and panel discussions on collecting, analysing and interpreting livestock and gender data.
The community is exploring a diverse range of topics related to the planning, monitoring and assessment of gendered outcomes in livestock-related projects, such as the selection of indicators for use along livestock value chains, and the practical challenges in improving the granularity of gender-disaggregated data.
CoP hosts
The Gender and Livestock Data community of Practice (CoP) is hosted by the Livestock Data for Decisions (LD4D) network, together with members of the International Livestock Research Institute’s (ILRI) gender team. The LD4D network, facilitated by SEBI-Livestock, brings together a wide range of parties to collaborate on new and innovative livestock data solutions.
Community facilitators
- Johanna Wong (SEBI-Livestock)
- Beth Miller (SEBI-Livestock Consultant)
- Alessandra Galiè (ILRI)
- Anni McLeod (SEBI-Livestock Consultant)
- Fiona Allan (SEBI-Livestock)
Photo info: Borana family leads their goats out for grazing Borana, Ethiopia. Photo credit: Zerihun Sewunet (ILRI)