By Chris Sunday, Program Manager, Refugee Livelihoods – LIFT NK
BOMA works in some of the harshest environments and ecosystems on the planet, and that means we work with some of the most vulnerable yet resilient individuals and communities. With the onset of increasingly unpredictable weather patterns like longer droughts and more flash floods, already vulnerable groups are made that much more so despite contributing least to the problem.
As part of our mission to empower the most marginalized groups across Africa’s drylands, refugees, displaced persons, and members of the community around Kakuma Refugee Camp and Kalobeyei Refugee Settlement make up 45% of the total
Livelihoods and Inclusion for Transformation Northern Kenya (LIFT-NK) program participants (3,200 refugees and 1,750 members of the host community). We take a driven approach to help participants launch “green” businesses, contribute to local conservation efforts, and engage in climate mitigation strategies such as establishing and maintaining tree nurseries and apiaries. These efforts are essential to creating resilience in a region that is home to one of the
largest refugee camps in the world, but also facing accelerated ecosystem degradation due to the impacts of climate change.