
International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) Internship – Nairobi, Kenya
International Livestock Research Institute · Nairobi · Onsite
Job Description
International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) is offering paid internship opportunities in Nairobi, Kenya for students and young professionals interested in livestock agriculture, research, and capacity development.
ILRI works to improve food and nutritional security while reducing poverty in developing countries through research focused on efficient, safe, and sustainable livestock systems. As one of the 15 CGIAR research centers, ILRI is the only center dedicated entirely to animal agriculture research for the developing world.
Co-hosted by Kenya and Ethiopia, ILRI operates across Africa and Asia through regional offices, research programs, and strategic partnerships.
Position Details
Internship Program
Location: Nairobi
Type: Paid Internship
Category: Capacity Development (CapDev)
Duration: Usually 3 months or less, extendable up to 6 months depending on the program
The internship program provides short-term academic training for students who are required to complete internships as part of their academic curriculum. Successful candidates are expected to resume their studies after the internship period.
Interns will:
Work five days per week
Receive mentorship and supervision from ILRI staff
Gain practical exposure in livestock agriculture and research
Connect academic theory with real-world practice
Eligibility Requirements
Applicants must meet the following requirements at the time of application:
Be enrolled in an undergraduate university degree program with at least one semester remaining before graduation
Students in diploma and certificate programs may also qualify through ILRI partnership arrangements
Senior high school students may also be considered under selected programs
Proficiency in Microsoft Office
Good command of English
Benefits
ILRI offers:
Monthly stipend to support living expenses
Insurance coverage during the internship period
Professional mentorship and practical training experience
Required Application Documents
Applicants should submit:
Application letter
Detailed CV/Resume
Motivation letter
University internship request letter
Applications should be addressed to the Head of Capacity Development.
Application Process
Applicants will be required to complete an online application form through the ILRI careers portal.
Required Uploads
Resume/CV (PDF recommended)
Cover Letter (PDF recommended)
University letter confirming admission and internship requirements
Information You Will Provide
First Name & Last Name
Valid Email Address
Mobile Number
LinkedIn URL (optional)
Nationality
University or Institution
Degree Program
Area of Study
Requested Internship Dates
Internship End Date
Important Notice
ILRI does not charge any fee at any stage of the recruitment process, including:
Application
Interviews
Processing
Training
Applicants should also avoid sharing unnecessary banking information during recruitment.
Due to the high volume of applications, only shortlisted candidates will be contacted on a rolling basis as opportunities become available.
How to Apply
Apply through the official ILRI careers page:
Boost your application
AscendurePro members win more interviews with these tools. Free to start, no credit card.
🧠 AI Insights for this role
Resume → Job Fit Analysis
Get a fit score, keyword gaps, and specific resume edits tailored to this role.
Check my fitLikely Interview Questions
Show prep pack ↓
LIKELY QUESTIONS - Why are you interested in interning with ILRI specifically, rather than a general agriculture or development organization? - How does your current degree program and coursework relate to livestock agriculture, research, or capacity development? - What do you hope to learn during a short internship of 3 to 6 months in Nairobi? - Tell us about a university project, field assignment, or research task where you collected, analyzed, or presented information. - ILRI works in multicultural, international, and research-driven environments across Africa and Asia. How would you adapt to working with diverse teams and stakeholders? - This internship requires strong English and Microsoft Office skills. Can you describe how you have used Word, Excel, PowerPoint, or similar tools in your academic work? - Since this internship is intended for students who must return to their studies, how does this opportunity fit into your academic timeline and long-term career goals? - Capacity Development involves learning, knowledge sharing, and connecting theory to practice. How would you contribute if assigned to training support, documentation, data entry, literature review, or coordination tasks? BEHAVIOURAL QUESTIONS - Tell me about a time you had to learn something new quickly to complete an academic or practical assignment. Model approach: Situation - Briefly describe the course, project, or assignment and the new skill required. Task - Explain what you needed to deliver and by when. Action - Show how you broke the learning into steps, used available resources, asked for guidance, and applied the skill. Result - Quantify or describe the outcome, what you achieved, and what you learned about adaptability. - Describe a time you worked in a team with people from different backgrounds or with different working styles. Model approach: Situation - Set up the team context and why collaboration mattered. Task - Explain your role and the challenge caused by different communication or work preferences. Action - Describe how you listened, clarified roles, kept communication respectful, and focused the team on shared goals. Result - Share the project outcome and how the experience strengthened your teamwork in diverse environments. - Give an example of a time you had to manage multiple deadlines or competing priorities. Model approach: Situation - Describe the period with overlapping coursework, exams, or responsibilities. Task - State what had to be completed and the risk if you fell behind. Action - Explain how you prioritized tasks, used a schedule or tracker, communicated early about constraints, and stayed organized. Result - Show that you met deadlines, maintained quality, and built stronger time-management habits. - Tell me about a time you handled data, documents, or information carefully and accurately. Model approach: Situation - Describe the assignment involving records, research notes, spreadsheets, or reports. Task - Explain the importance of accuracy and confidentiality. Action - Highlight how you checked entries, used clear file naming, verified sources, and corrected errors early. Result - Share the positive outcome, such as fewer mistakes, a reliable report, or praise for attention to detail. SMART QUESTIONS TO ASK - How are interns typically matched to teams or projects within livestock research or capacity development? - What would success look like for an intern in the first month of the program? - What kind of mentorship, supervision, and feedback structure do interns usually receive at ILRI? - Are interns usually exposed only to desk-based support, or do some roles include participation in research coordination, training activities, or field-related work? - How does ILRI ensure interns gain meaningful learning outcomes within a relatively short internship period? RED FLAGS TO WATCH FOR - Vague answers about the actual work, supervision, or learning objectives, which may suggest the internship is not well structured. - Heavy emphasis on routine admin work only, with little mention of mentorship, training, or exposure to research and capacity development. - Unclear communication about stipend, insurance, duration, extension conditions, or reporting lines.
Want full STAR-format answers tailored to your background? Use the Interview Simulator.
Adjacent Career Paths
Roles you'd also qualify for based on this posting's requirements:
- Research Assistant Intern — The internship builds practical research exposure, mentorship, and data handling skills relevant to supporting livestock studies.
- Agriculture Program Assistant Intern — Candidates interested in livestock systems and capacity development can also support program coordination and field activities.
- Monitoring and Evaluation Intern — Exposure to research programs and Microsoft Office skills aligns with tracking project outputs and compiling reports.
- Capacity Development Intern — The role directly matches the internship category and suits applicants supporting training and learning initiatives.