35 orgs in this activity group
Every organization with primary activities in Smallholder Agricultural Support Services or any of the groups nested inside it. Click a column header to sort. Filter by name or state above the table.
| # | Organization | State | Revenue | Activities ↓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CONSUMER WATCH Kenya Organic Agriculture Network (KOAN) is a national membership organization founded in 2005 that coordinates the organic agriculture sector in Kenya. It sup… | — | — | 5 |
| 2 | FARM STRATEGIES ORGANIZATION Kenya pilot stub summary (org_types stubbed to bypass profile gate) | — | — | 3 |
| 3 | FISHERIES AND AGRICULTURAL TECHNOLOGIES Kenya pilot stub summary (org_types stubbed to bypass profile gate) | — | — | 3 |
| 4 | BETTER LIFE FOR THE NEEDY FOUNDATION (BELFON) Better Life Foundation (BELFON) is an operational nonprofit based in Nagaland, India, established in 2009. It empowers indigenous communities through sustainab… | — | — | 2 |
| 5 | CENTRE FOR LEGAL RIGHTS EDUCATION AND ADVOCACY AND DEVELOPMENT (CLREAD) CREAW Kenya is a feminist non-governmental organization founded in 1999 that advances women's and girls' rights through advocacy, movement building, and progra… | — | — | 2 |
| 6 | FILSAN ORGANIZATION Filsan Somalia is a commercial agricultural company producing and marketing quality seeds of superior crop varieties to farmers in Somalia. The organization of… | — | — | 2 |
| 7 | RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND EDUCATION AGENCY RACIDA is a regional not-for-profit organization founded in 2001, working to build the resilience of vulnerable pastoral and agro-pastoral communities in the A… | — | — | 2 |
| 8 | SAFE EASTERN AFRICAN SKIES Kenya pilot stub summary (org_types stubbed to bypass profile gate) | — | — | 2 |
| 9 | ACTION SUPPORT DEVELOPMENT CENTRE Action for Social Support and Development Organization (ASDO) is a national humanitarian and development organization founded in 2020. It focuses on empowering… | — | — | 1 |
| 10 | AGRIBUSINESS FOR AFRICAN MARKETS The Africa Agribusiness Academy (AAA) is an entrepreneurship network that fosters innovation and growth among small and medium-sized agribusiness firms in Afri… | — | — | 1 |
| 11 | AGRO PASTORAL DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATION (APDO) Kenya pilot stub summary (org_types stubbed to bypass profile gate) | — | — | 1 |
| 12 | APPROPRIATE INITIATIVES FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN AFRICA Africa Adaptation Initiative (AAI) strengthens climate adaptation across Africa by building knowledge, supporting high-level political advocacy, and implementi… | — | — | 1 |
| 13 | CENTRE FOR DEMOCRACY AND TECHNOLOGY AFRICA Centre for Digital & Technological Development (CDTD) Kenya is a youth-focused nonprofit based in Kisumu that provides practical technology training in web and… | — | — | 1 |
| 14 | CHERISH OTHERS ORGANIZATION KENYA Cherish Others Organisation Kenya is a nonprofit dedicated to improving the livelihoods of resource-poor communities in Kenya, primarily focusing on TransMara … | — | — | 1 |
| 15 | CITIZEN VOICE & ACTION NETWORK KENYA Community Voice Alliance (CVA) is a nonprofit organization focused on accountability to affected populations, community engagement, and localization in humanit… | — | — | 1 |
| 16 | COMMUNITY EMPOWERMENT IN GENDER HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME Kenya pilot stub summary (org_types stubbed to bypass profile gate) | — | — | 1 |
| 17 | EASTERN AFRICAN NETWORK FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT Hand in Hand Eastern Africa is a non-profit organization based in Kenya that focuses on poverty alleviation through enterprise creation and job development. Th… | — | — | 1 |
| 18 | ENLARGED TENT FOR GROWTH AND OUTREACH IN AFRICA (ETEGOA) Grow East Africa (GEA) is an international nonprofit based in San Marcos, California, working to improve the education and livelihoods of poor rural communitie… | — | — | 1 |
| 19 | GREEN DEAL FOUNDATION Green Deal Initiative (GDI) is a Kenyan nonprofit organization that empowers youth, women, and marginalized communities to transition towards a sustainable, in… | — | — | 1 |
| 20 | HEALTH AND AGRICULTURE BOOSTERS Kenya pilot stub summary (org_types stubbed to bypass profile gate) | — | — | 1 |
strategies used in this activity group
Approaches extracted from orgs working in this activity group and the groups nested inside it. Click any to see the full set of orgs running the same approach.
- Community-Led Development 23 orgsBy placing decision-making power and resources in the hands of local communities, sustainable and culturally appropriate development outcomes are achieved, because local ownership fosters accountability, relevance, and long-term resilience. This strategy centers on the belief that communities are the primary agents of their own development. Rather than imposing external solutions, organizations using this approach support communities to identify needs, design interventions, and manage resources, ensuring that initiatives reflect local priorities and knowledge. It differs from top-down or purely service-delivery models by emphasizing self-determination, participatory governance, and systemic empowerment rather than short-term aid.CHERISH OTHERS ORGANIZATION KENYAMAASAI CONSERVATION DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONNABWANI ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTHCARE INTERVENTION PROJECT (NEHLIP)SAFE EASTERN AFRICAN SKIES
- Integrated Development with Local Ownership 14 orgsBy combining multi-sectoral interventions with community-led design and sustainable financing models, organizations produce resilient and scalable development outcomes, because solutions rooted in local agency, cultural context, and economic self-reliance are more likely to endure and create systemic change. This strategy unifies education, livelihoods, nutrition, climate resilience, and social support within a single, coordinated framework that centers community participation and long-term sustainability. Unlike siloed interventions, it treats poverty and vulnerability as interconnected challenges requiring co-created, holistic solutions—distinguishing it from standalone education or aid-based models by embedding financial mechanisms (like cross-subsidization and "pay-it-forward") and environmental sustainability into the core of service delivery. The shared belief across organizations is that durable change emerges not just from access to services, but from empowering communities asMAASAI CONSERVATION DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONMICRO-ENTERPRISE AND ENVIRONMENTAL DEVELOPMENT NETWORKNABWANI ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTHCARE INTERVENTION PROJECT (NEHLIP)SAFE EASTERN AFRICAN SKIES
- Empowerment Through Participation 6 orgsBy engaging individuals and communities as active agents in decision-making and program design, we foster sustainable social change, because inclusive participation builds ownership, strengthens local capacity, and transforms power dynamics. This strategy centers on shifting power from external actors to communities by prioritizing participatory processes, whether through dialogue, media, governance, or economic inclusion. It appears across diverse issue areas—from peacebuilding to youth engagement and development—unified by the belief that lasting change emerges when people shape their own solutions. Unlike top-down or service-delivery models, this approach treats community agency as the engine of resilience and transformation.AGRO PASTORAL DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATION (APDO)CENTRE FOR LEGAL RIGHTS EDUCATION AND ADVOCACY AND DEVELOPMENT (CLREAD)CITIZEN VOICE & ACTION NETWORK KENYAHEALTH AND AGRICULTURE BOOSTERS
- Collaborative Ecosystem Building 5 orgsBy forming multi-stakeholder partnerships and networks, organizations amplify impact and drive systemic change, because collective action leverages diverse resources, enhances local ownership, and enables scalable, sustainable solutions beyond the capacity of any single actor. This strategy emphasizes the intentional creation of collaborative ecosystems—linking communities, institutions, governments, and civil society—to address complex development challenges. Unlike isolated interventions, it relies on coordinated action, shared goals, and pooled expertise to build resilience, scale innovations, and transform systems across sectors such as health, education, environment, and the creative economy. What distinguishes it is its focus on structural integration and long-term coalition-building rather than short-term, single-organization delivery.APPROPRIATE INITIATIVES FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN AFRICAHEALTH AND AGRICULTURE BOOSTERSINTERNATIONAL AFRICAN EMPOWERMENT NETWORKJAMII IMPROVEMENT HEALTH PROGRAMS
- Community-Led Conservation 4 orgsBy placing decision-making authority and implementation leadership in the hands of local communities, conservation initiatives achieve more sustainable and culturally appropriate outcomes, because local stewardship fosters long-term ownership, increases compliance, and integrates traditional knowledge with practical on-the-ground action. This strategy centers on devolving power to local communities to design, lead, and manage conservation efforts, distinguishing it from top-down or science-only approaches. It operates on the belief that lasting environmental change is contingent on social legitimacy, cultural relevance, and direct community benefit, making conservation a shared responsibility rather than an externally imposed mandate.FARM STRATEGIES ORGANIZATIONFILSAN ORGANIZATIONSAFE EASTERN AFRICAN SKIESTREES FOR THE FUTURE AND AGROFORESTRY ORGANIZATION - CHANGED NAME TO: TREES FOR KENYA
- Empowerment Through Structural Access 4 orgsBy expanding access to education, economic resources, and decision-making platforms for marginalized women and girls, we produce increased autonomy and resilience, because systemic inclusion disrupts cycles of exploitation and enables self-driven change. This strategy unifies interventions that center on altering structural barriers—such as lack of education, financial exclusion, or absent legal protections—by actively building pathways to safety, economic participation, and leadership. What distinguishes it from narrower service-delivery models is its focus on shifting power dynamics through sustained, ecosystem-level support, combining material resources (e.g., microfinance, shelters) with social transformation (e.g., norm change, survivor-led advocacy). While some organizations emphasize education or entrepreneurship as entry points, the shared theory is that durable change emerges when marginalized individuals gain both the means and the agency to determine their own futures.CENTRE FOR LEGAL RIGHTS EDUCATION AND ADVOCACY AND DEVELOPMENT (CLREAD)HEALTH AND AGRICULTURE BOOSTERSJAMII IMPROVEMENT HEALTH PROGRAMSRURAL WOMEN ENTERPRENEURS PROMOTIONAL PROGRAMMES
- Amplifying Lived Experience 3 orgsBy centering programs on the lived experience of beneficiaries through peer leadership, storytelling, and community-led design, we produce more trusted, relevant, and sustainable outcomes, because shared experience builds authenticity, reduces stigma, and increases engagement in ways that external expertise alone cannot. This strategy involves systematically integrating the knowledge, voice, and agency of people with direct experience of a social issue—such as drug use, disability, gender-based violence, or poor health—into service delivery, advocacy, and program design. It distinguishes itself from top-down or expert-driven models by treating lived experience as a form of expertise that enhances program legitimacy, cultural resonance, and behavioral impact. Unlike general community engagement, this approach positions affected individuals as leaders, educators, and change agents rather than passive recipients.FISHERIES AND AGRICULTURAL TECHNOLOGIESMAASAI CONSERVATION DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONNYANZA EASTERN AND WESTERN SOCIETY EMPOWERMENT ORGANIZATION
- Human Rights-Based Empowerment 3 orgsBy grounding programs in human rights frameworks and centering marginalized voices in advocacy and decision-making, organizations foster systemic change and empowerment, because rights-based approaches transform power structures, promote accountability, and enable individuals to claim their rights as duty-bearers are held responsible. This strategy unifies efforts that go beyond service delivery by embedding human rights principles into programming, legal empowerment, education, and advocacy. It emphasizes structural change through local leadership, policy influence, and the transformation of social norms—distinguishing it from purely technical or charitable interventions by treating beneficiaries as rights-holders and targeting root causes of inequity.ACTION SUPPORT DEVELOPMENT CENTRENYANZA EASTERN AND WESTERN SOCIETY EMPOWERMENT ORGANIZATIONSAVE THE PASTORALISTS KENYA (STP)
- Integrated Empowerment Pathway 3 orgsBy combining economic, educational, and social support interventions in a coordinated sequence, organizations produce sustainable poverty reduction and empowerment, because layered deprivations require multi-dimensional solutions that build individual agency, community ownership, and systemic resilience over time. This strategy involves delivering sequenced and holistic interventions—such as asset transfers, skills training, financial inclusion, psychosocial support, and community engagement—to address the interconnected causes of poverty and marginalization. Unlike standalone service models, this approach treats economic empowerment as inseparable from social inclusion, gender equity, and environmental sustainability, creating compounding benefits across individuals, families, and communities. It is distinct from narrower vocational or microfinance models by intentionally integrating personal agency development with structural enablers like market access, collective organization, andEASTERN AFRICAN NETWORK FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENTGREEN DEAL FOUNDATIONHEALTH AND AGRICULTURE BOOSTERS
- Holistic Transformation through Integrated Faith and Empowerment 2 orgsBy integrating spiritual engagement with socio-economic empowerment and relational care, organizations produce sustainable personal and community transformation, because combining faith, dignity, and agency addresses root causes of poverty and fosters mutual ownership of change. This strategy unifies faith-based motivation with comprehensive development practices—spanning education, trauma-informed care, vocational training, and community-led initiatives—not as parallel activities but as interdependent levers for deep, lasting change. Unlike models that treat material aid or evangelism in isolation, this approach depends on the synergy between spiritual purpose, relational trust, and capacity-building to shift individuals from dependency to leadership within their own communities.CENTRE FOR DEMOCRACY AND TECHNOLOGY AFRICASUPPORT INNOVATORS ORGANIZATION
- Community-Led Systems Change 1 orgBy centering communities as leaders and decision-makers in environmental and climate initiatives, we achieve more equitable, sustainable, and culturally grounded outcomes, because local ownership ensures relevance, builds trust, and aligns solutions with lived realities. This strategy unifies diverse organizations around a shared belief that transformative change—whether in climate policy, land governance, or resilience—must emerge from the agency of affected communities. It distinguishes itself from top-down or expert-driven models by prioritizing grassroots knowledge, participatory legitimacy, and self-determination as foundational to effective systems change. While tactics vary—from faith-based education to digital democracy platforms—the core theory of action consistently links community leadership to durable, just, and adaptive outcomes.APPROPRIATE INITIATIVES FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN AFRICA
- Education as Protection 1 orgBy providing safe, accessible, and holistic education environments, we protect girls from gender-based harms like FGM, child marriage, and child labor, because schooling removes them from high-risk contexts and creates structural alternatives that delay and prevent exploitation. This strategy positions education not only as a developmental right but as an immediate protective intervention. It integrates physical safety, normative change, and systemic support—such as boarding schools, menstrual hygiene, and community engagement—to disrupt pathways to harm. Unlike standalone education programs, this approach explicitly links school access to risk mitigation, treating education as a shield against intersecting vulnerabilities.CHERISH OTHERS ORGANIZATION KENYA
- Experiential Engagement Model 1 orgBy engaging individuals in hands-on, participatory learning and action, we foster sustained behavior change and local ownership of development outcomes, because direct experience builds personal connection, practical skills, and intrinsic motivation. This strategy centers on using experiential learning—such as gardening, tree planting, science experiments, or peer-led demonstrations—as a gateway to deeper understanding and long-term adoption of sustainable practices. It is distinct from knowledge-transfer models because it prioritizes emotional engagement, identity formation, and doing over formal instruction, and appears across environmental, health, and STEM education contexts. While the domains vary, the shared theory is that lived experience catalyzes agency and lasting change more effectively than top-down education or material support alone.RURAL WOMEN ENTERPRENEURS PROMOTIONAL PROGRAMMES
- Holistic Youth Empowerment 1 orgBy integrating education, mentorship, skills training, and psychosocial support, we produce resilient and capable youth, because sustained personal and community transformation requires addressing multiple, interdependent dimensions of vulnerability simultaneously. This strategy centers on a multidimensional approach to youth development, combining academic access, emotional support, vocational training, and values-based guidance to break cycles of poverty and exclusion. Unlike standalone interventions (e.g., education or job training alone), it emphasizes the synergistic effect of addressing structural and personal barriers together, fostering long-term agency and systemic impact across diverse community contexts.MUMIAS COMMUNITY PROGRAMMES
- Holistic, Community-Driven Integration 1 orgBy integrating services across health, education, economic, and social domains within community-led systems, organizations achieve sustainable inclusion and systemic change, because addressing interconnected barriers through locally owned, multidimensional approaches ensures relevance, reduces fragmentation, and builds collective agency. This strategy emphasizes the convergence of multidisciplinary support—such as healthcare, education, livelihoods, and psychosocial services—not as isolated interventions but as coordinated, community-embedded systems. It distinguishes itself from siloed service models by prioritizing local ownership, cultural alignment, and the simultaneous tackling of structural, economic, and attitudinal barriers, thereby fostering long-term resilience and equity.MUMIAS COMMUNITY PROGRAMMES
- Integrated Holistic Support 1 orgBy addressing multiple interconnected needs—such as education, health, emotional well-being, and family or economic stability—within a unified model, organizations produce sustainable development and break cycles of poverty and vulnerability, because isolated interventions fail to overcome the compounding nature of systemic disadvantage. This strategy centers on the belief that vulnerability is multidimensional and that lasting change requires coordinated, simultaneous support across social, emotional, economic, and physical domains. Unlike targeted or siloed approaches that address one need in isolation (e.g., education alone), this model ensures that basic needs, dignity, and systemic barriers are addressed together, creating a stable foundation for long-term growth. It is distinguished by its emphasis on synergy across services and its focus on root causes rather than symptoms.NYANZA EASTERN AND WESTERN SOCIETY EMPOWERMENT ORGANIZATION