Insect pests are major yield reducers in sorghum under traditional farming practices in Africa. The use of resistant varieties in an integrated pest management scheme provides the most cost effective and practical means of sorghum insect control. Corneous grain sorghums are more weevil resistant than their softer endosperm counterparts. A wide range of sources of resistance to shootfiy, stem-borer and greenbug are known. Breeding for resistance to sorghum insects has been practised with varying degrees of success. Greenbug resistance breeding in sorghum has been successful in the U.S.A. Stem-borers are perhaps the most serious group of sorghum insects in Eastern Africa and further efforts are needed in breeding for resistance to these pests. In an effective pest resistance breeding work, the breeder and the entomologist must work as a team to make the fastest possible progress. Where several pests are of concern in an area, genotypes with multiple resistance in good agronomic backgrounds are needed.