Sunday, October 5, 2025

Rising Together: Insights from Recent Research Centered around Jigjiga on Shared-Benefit Paths to Progress

By Mohammed Hassen Mohamed (Xareed)

Around Jigjiga and its surrounding Somali Region, a growing number of studies in the past few years have sought to understand what happens when communities commit to collective action and shared purpose: what elevates human well-being, what diminishes inefficiency, and how groups escape persistent poverty. This review stitches together evidence from internal research—academic, programmatic, and policy-oriented—highlighting how emphasis on general/community benefit has shaped economic and human development outcomes. It seeks to draw insights on what has worked, what holds things back, and how communities might continue rising toward higher peaks of prosperity.

Emphasis on Community Benefit and Collective Endeavor: What the Recent Studies Tell Us

Cooperatives, Shared Enterprises, and Human Capacity

Recent field studies in and around Jigjiga underscore the transformative potential of community cooperatives when human capacity is well developed. For instance, cooperative enterprises for livestock products (milk, small ruminants) show that when technical training, management capacity, and market linkages are intentionally developed, the productivity and incomes of cooperative members rise significantly. These studies suggest that education and skills—both formal and informal—are not afterthoughts but central levers: members who receive leadership training, financial literacy instruction, or production/management skills tend to make more efficient use of shared resources, reduce waste, and improve product quality.

In several cooperatives, shared governance mechanisms—elected leadership, member meetings, collective decision-making—also affect outcomes. When these structures are inclusive (women, youth, minority clans), the cooperatives show better internal accountability, less leakage of benefits to elites, and greater sustainability.

Financial Inclusion and Risk Management

Financial inclusion emerges across multiple recent studies as a critical foundation for shared progress. Shared savings groups, local credit cooperatives, microfinance linked to cooperative groups have aided households in smoothing consumption, investing in inputs (feeds, seeds, veterinary medicines), and coping with shocks (droughts, illness, market price shifts). Research in Jigjiga area shows that households participating in such groups are more likely to invest in agricultural improvement or livestock fattening, with measurable increases in incomes over time.

Another dimension is risk sharing: pastoralist and agro-pastoralist communities in the region, in studies conducted in 2023-24, show that joint action in herd management (rotational grazing, shared water resources, coordinated drought mitigation) both reduces losses in bad years and improves resilience. These measures help communities avoid sliding back into poverty after shocks, thus rendering gains more durable.

Public Goods, Infrastructure, and Services

Several studies examine local public goods (roads, small bridges, water points, clinics, schools) and their relation to community welfare when community leadership and residents collectively prioritize them. In the Somali Region, and especially in areas around Jigjiga, investments in water supply systems, mobile health/outreach clinics, and schooling have yielded improved child nutrition, school enrolment/completion, and reduced mortality rates. These improvements in human development indicators are more visible where communities have been involved in planning, maintenance, and oversight. Participation increases ownership, which in turn reduces maintenance failures or neglect.

One study found that when communities are given decision-making power over which public investments to prioritize (versus top-down selection), satisfaction with service delivery is higher, and outcomes (e.g., water reliability, school attendance) are measurably better. Thus, community say-so is not merely democratic; it is instrumental in effectiveness and efficiency.

Constraints: What Inhibits Full Realization of Shared Development

The research also lays bare persistent barriers. First, infrastructure deficits—poor roads, weak electricity supply, limited cold storage—raise the cost of doing business and limit markets for agricultural or livestock surplus. Even when cooperatives or individuals produce more, transporting to market or accessing value-added processing remains difficult, undermining profitability.

Secondly, limited technology adoption—both in agricultural inputs and in manufacturing or processing—is common. Studies around Jigjiga reveal that many small producers cannot afford improved seed, veterinary care, feed, or machinery; even where subsidies exist, knowledge and access are uneven.

Third, institutional weaknesses: some community bodies struggle with weak governance, limited transparency, elite capture, or lack of consistent public oversight. Without strong, inclusive governance, common-benefit institutions risk replicating inequities rather than redressing them.

Fourth, climatic/external shocks remain a severe risk. Droughts, market volatility, disease outbreaks among livestock, inflation all threaten the progress made, particularly among marginalized households. Community resilience measures are present but often underfunded or poorly organized.

Lastly, gender, youth, and social inclusion challenges: several studies find that benefits tend to concentrate among men or dominant groups unless deliberately countered by policy, programming, or community norms that promote participation of women, youth, and minority clan or refugee populations.

Deepening the Understanding: Interconnections and Synergies

What is emerging from these studies is not just isolated findings, but patterns of synergy. Explicit focus on communal benefit tends to produce compounding gains when multiple dimensions are improved in tandem: for example, cooperatives that receive good training and financial linkages and access to market infrastructure tend to outperform those that have just one of those supports.

Moreover, there is an observable feedback loop: as human development outcomes improve (education, health), people are better able to engage in collective action, adopt new technologies, manage cooperatives, and hold local institutions accountable. In turn, better institutions and services reinforce human development, creating virtuous cycles.

Another synergy is between stability / resilience and productivity: communities that organize around common risk management (for example shared grazing plans, pooling veterinary care, joint water resource maintenance) are less likely to see dramatic losses in shocks and therefore can sustain progressive investments rather than slipping back.

Implications: What Helps Communities Rise From Poverty and Inefficiency

From the evidence in and around Jigjiga, the following principles emerge as particularly important for achieving shared, sustainable progress:

  • Empowerment and inclusive governance that ensures women, youth, marginalized groups have decision-making voice and benefit.
  • Capacity building: technical, managerial, financial literacy are essential; not peripheral.
  • Linking to markets and value chains, so that improved production leads to higher earnings, not just subsistence.
  • Reliable infrastructure and public service investment, especially water, roads, health, and education, that communities help define and maintain.
  • Risk mitigation: building resilience to climate, market, and health shocks through shared institutions and planning.
  • Continual external support, from NGOs, governmental bodies, or development agencies, not just in implementation but in facilitating coordination, technical input, and policy framework.

In-Depth Conclusion

The body of recent internal research around Jigjiga offers strong, evidence-based support for the proposition that focusing on collective benefit and shared purpose is not an abstraction but a powerful strategy for rising out of poverty, inefficiency, and stagnation. Where communities organize around common goals—cooperatives, public infrastructure, health, education—and build inclusive governance, the gains are not only immediate (better incomes, services, human welfare) but cumulative: human capital strengthens institutions, which in turn unlock further growth and resilience.

However, the journey is complex: constraints of infrastructure, climate, finance, inclusion, and technology must be acknowledged and addressed. Shared benefit alone cannot compensate for lack of roads, absence of markets, or major external shocks—but in their presence, it amplifies the impact of every advance.

For Jigjiga’s region (as a case), the pathway upward lies in harnessing its already visible strengths (cooperative spirit, community desire, existing programs) and filling in critical gaps: more inclusive leadership, better market access, resilient infrastructure, and sustained external support. If this alignment of purpose, capacity, and resources is achieved, the region can match or even outstrip other nations or subregions that have begun from similar starting points—but had stronger collective focus and alignment earlier.

In sum, the research underscores that “pondering day and night”—a metaphor for continuous, collective reflection and action—matters deeply. For communities willing to move together, thinking together, and investing together, rising above poverty, inefficiency, and stagnation toward advanced economic and human development becomes not just a dream, but a practical, evidence-grounded possibility.

Mohamed Hassan Mohamed (Xareed), an MBA graduate of distinguished merit, is a seasoned academic and lecturer whose expertise spans scientific economic management, business information systems, human development, and a range of interdisciplinary domains. His intellectual contributions—marked by a fusion of advanced scholarly inquiry and strategic analysis—primarily explore the intricate dynamics of geoeconomic competition and regional conflict across the Horn of Africa. He can be reached at: Xareedmo45@gmail.com

Related Stories