Conceptual Framework

Why And How “Socio-Ecological Approaches to Sustainable Tribal Development” is appropriate
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A. Let us define the Project Objectives first

Objectives for this type of project should address interconnected areas: community resilience, ecosystem health, sustainable livelihoods, and governance.
1. Enhance community Livelihood and resilience
This objective focuses on strengthening the capacity of vulnerable communities to withstand and adapt to climate change impacts.
Specific objectives:
Indicators of success:
2. Protect and restore ecosystems
This objective addresses the ecological component of the socio-ecological system, recognizing that healthy ecosystems provide essential services for climate resilience.
Specific objectives:
Indicators of success:
3. Promote climate-resilient sustainable livelihoods
This objective links ecological resilience directly to the well-being and economic security of communities by fostering sustainable economic opportunities.
Specific objectives:
Indicators of success:
4. Strengthen governance and policy frameworks
This objective aims to integrate climate resilience into decision-making processes at all levels, ensuring a sustainable and enabling environment for the project’s success.
Specific objectives:
Indicators of success:
Why such Socio-ecological Approaches to Sustainable Tribal Development

B. How to apply it — step-by-step plan for IBRAD (actionable)

Below is a phased plan you can adapt to any tribal landscape (assume a 3-year pilot + scale pathway). Each phase lists key activities, immediate outputs, and who at IBRAD would typically lead.
Phase 0 — Preparation & Scoping (1 month)
Please consult the Methodology on this Website.
Phase 1 — Participatory Baseline, Identify Change Agents, Leadership, Cohesive groups, (2–3 months)
Phase 2 — Co-design Interventions, Prashikshan Shivir, IEC (1–2 months)
Phase 3 — Pilot Implementation, Design Strategic Communication, Microeconomics, Value Chain (2–12 months)
Phase 4 —Continue Social Learning, Rituals Monitoring, Institutionalisation, Adaptive Management & Capacity Building (continuous)
Phase 5 — Scale & Institutionalise (Year 2–3)
Phase 6 — Evaluation & Knowledge Sharing (end of Year 3)

C. Measuring outcomes — M&E framework (compact, ready-to-use)

Use a mix of process, outcome, and impact indicators. Co-set targets with communities. Below is a practical indicator table you can paste into an M&E spreadsheet.
DomainIndicator (what to measure)Sample question for the field team/communityMethod/data sourceFrequencyResponsible
Participation & governance (process)% households participating in resource management meetings“Did any household member attend the last village resource meeting?”Meeting registers + household surveyQuarterlyCommunity monitor / IBRAD
Social resilience (outcome)# of household coping strategies used during last drought (diversified income, savings, seed banks)“When crops failed last season, which strategies were used?”Household survey, FGDsAnnuallyIBRAD M&E
Nutrition & health (outcome)% children <5 with adequate MUAC / reduction in underweight or stunting“Measure MUAC/height-age/weight-age”Anthropometric survey (standard WHO methods)AnnualHealth team / local health worker
Livestock health (outcome)Incidence of major livestock disease events per 100 animals“Number of sick animals in last 6 months” + veterinary recordsVet camp records + household recallBiannualVet partner / IBRAD
Ecological health (outcome)Tree species richness / % native cover in community forest“Number of native tree species found in transect”Biodiversity transects / remote sensing for canopy coverAnnualEcologist / IBRAD
Water quality (outcome)% water points meeting E. coli/coliform safety threshold (or basic water quality parameters)“Test record: E. coli/DO/pH”Field water testing + lab (if available)BiannualIBRAD field team
Livelihoods (outcome)% increase in average household income from diversified sources“Total household income last year (sources)”Household income survey + market recordsAnnualIBRAD economics analyst
Knowledge & capacity (process/outcome)# community members trained & applying new forest/agro practices“Can you list three new practices you use?”Training registers + follow up observationQuarterlyTraining lead
Institutional & policy (impact)Number of local policies or government schemes adjusted / engaged with due to IBRAD evidence“Any official inclusion of community plan in govt scheme?”Policy tracking, meeting minutesAnnualIBRAD outreach

Notes on targets: set SMART targets with communities. Example: “Increase households practicing at least 2 diversified livelihood activities from 12% to 30% in 3 years.” Targets depend on baseline.

D. Recommended evaluation design (rigorous but realistic)

E. Practical & ethical considerations

F. Quick monitoring tools & tips

Textualisation workshops before training — local case studies, local language versions, inclusion of traditional knowledge.
2. Monitoring & feedback built into training
3. Sustainability & institutional anchoring
4. Capacity gaps in training delivery
5. Diversity/inclusiveness
6. Use of digital/blended modes