Project Details
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In Search of Order: Institutional Change, Violent Regulation and Environmental Knowledge under Conditions of Rapid Social Ecological Change

Subject Area Social and Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology
Term from 2010 to 2017
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 165405448
 
Final Report Year 2018

Final Report Abstract

Pastoral nomadic societies in Eastern Africa are rapidly changing: sedentarization, the demise of communal pasture management, diversification entailing increasing investment into sedentary agriculture, labor migration and growing internal stratification are the more obvious consequences of such changes. Besides high rates of demographic growth, widespread violence, state failure and the increasing commoditization of pastoral production are named as major causes. The historical contextualization of main drivers highlights that processes perceived as rapid nowadays have deep historical roots. These often reach back to late colonial projects of resource management. This subproject analyzes how pastoralists redefine their relations to the environment through altered modes of engagement with the landscape entailing changes in land-use, control over land and water and changing intellectual approaches to ‘the environment’. Frequently these processes are accompanied by violent negotiations over the (re)distribution of resources and access to land. The lead hypothesis is that these changes necessitate a profound reorganization of the entire regime of regulation: a formerly uniform regime of regulation is breaking up and it is not clear whether different regimes of regulation will co-exist in the future, whether one new regime of regulation (e.g., agropastoralism) will arise or if contestations over different approaches to the environment will shape the future. The project assessed a process of reorganization, which started ten to twenty years ago and is still evolving. We observed how new institutions arise and others are dismissed, expanding the focus back until the 1950s. Communities and actors are actively searching for new forms of resilience in an increasingly complex setting.The work has targeted particularly the following aspects of change): a) the transition to sedentary agriculture in the Churo Highlands and beyond, the intensification of honey production and the institutional changes associated therewith; b) newly emerging resource conflicts and the re-definition of borderlands, including the politicization of cattle raiding and other forms of violent regulation; c) local perception of and adaptation to environmental changes, particularly changes in landscape, bush encroachment and fodder quality; d) the imprint of social, cultural and social changes on the spatial figuration: from pastoral paths to sedentary places.

Publications

  • (2011) Notes on Land-based Conflicts in Kenya’s Arid Areas. Africa Spectrum, 46(3), 77-81
    Greiner, C., Bollig, M., McCabe, J. T.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.1177/000203971104600305)
  • (2012) Unexpected Consequences: Wildlife Conservation and Territorial Conflict in Northern Kenya. Human Ecology, 40(3), 415-425
    Greiner, C.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.1007/s10745-012-9491-6)
  • (2013) From Cattle to Corn: Attributes of Emerging Farming Systems of Former Pastoral Nomads in East Pokot, Kenya. Society & Natural Resources, 26(12), 1478-1490
    Greiner, C., Alvarez, M., Becker, M.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.1080/08941920.2013.791901)
  • (2013) Guns, Land and Votes: Cattle Rustling and the Politics of Boundary- (Re)Making in Northern Kenya. African Affairs, 112(447), 216-237
    Greiner, C.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.1093/afraf/adt003)
  • (2013) Introduction: Specialisation and Diversification among African Pastoral Societies. In M. Bollig, M. Schnegg, & H.-P. Wotzka (Eds.), Pastoralism in Africa. Past, Present and Future (pp. 1-28). New York: Berghan
    Bollig, M., Schnegg, M.
  • (2013) Pastoralism in Africa. Past, Present, and Futures. Oxford; New York: Berghan Books
    Bollig, M., Schnegg, M., Wotzka, H.-P.
  • (2013) The Political Ecology of Specialisation and Diversification: Long-term Dynamics of Pastoralism in East Pokot District, Kenya. In M. Bollig, M. Schnegg, & H.-P. Wotzka (Eds.), Pastoralism in Africa. Past, Present, and Futures (pp. 289-315). Oxford; New York: Berghan Books
    Bollig, M., Österle, M.
  • (2014) Inscribing Identity and Agency on the Landscape: Of Pathways, Places, and the Transition of the Public Sphere in East Pokot, Kenya. African Studies Review, 57(03), 55-78
    Bollig, M., Greiner, C., Österle, M.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.1017/asr.2014.92)
  • (2014) Resilience: Analytical Tool, Bridging Concept or Development Goal? Anthropological Perspectives on the Use of a Border Object. Zeitschrift für Ethnologie, 139(2), 253-279
    Bollig, M.
  • (2016) Adaptive cycles in the savannah: pastoral specialization and diversification in northern Kenya. Journal of Eastern African Studies, 10(1), 21-44
    Bollig, M.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2016.1141568)
  • (2016) Agricultural change at the margins: adaptation and intensification in a Kenyan dryland. Journal of Eastern African Studies, 10(1), 130-149
    Greiner, C., Mwaka, I.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1134488)
  • (2016) Changes in landscape vegetation, forage plant composition and herding structure in the pastoralist livelihoods of East Pokot, Kenya. Journal of Eastern African Studies, 10(1), 88-110
    Vehrs, H.-P.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2015.1134401)
  • (2016) Conflicts, security and marginalisation: institutional change of the pastoral commons in a'glocal'world. Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics), 35(2), 405
    Haller, T., Van Dijk, H., Bollig, M., Greiner, C., Schareika, N., & Gabbert, C.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.20506/rst.35.2.2532)
  • (2016) Land-use change, territorial restructuring and the economies of anticipation in a Kenyan dryland. Journal of Eastern African Studies, 10(3), 530-547
    Greiner, C.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2016.1266197)
  • (2016) Land-use changes and the invasion dynamics of shrubs in Baringo. Journal of Eastern African Studies, 10(1), 111-129
    Becker, M., Alvarez, M., Heller, G., Leparmarai, P., Maina, D., Malombe, I., . . . Vehrs, H.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2016.1138664)
  • (2016) Resilience and collapse: histories, ecologies, conflicts and identities in the Baringo-Bogoria basin, Kenya. Journal of Eastern African Studies, 10(1), 1-20
    Anderson, D. M., & Bollig, M.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.1080/17531055.2016.1150240)
  • (2016) The “new pastoral commons” of Eastern and Southern Africa. International Journal of the Commons, 10(2)
    Bollig, M., Lesorogol, C. K.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.18352/ijc.771)
  • (2017) Fauna, Fire, and Farming: Landscape Formation over the Past 200 years in Pastoral East Pokot, Kenya. Human Ecology
    Vehrs, H.-P., Heller, G.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.1007/s10745-017-9926-1)
  • (2017) Pastoralism and land tenure change in Kenya: The failure of customary institutions. Development and Change, 48(1), 78-97
    Greiner, C.
    (See online at https://doi.org/10.1111/dech.12284)
  • (2017) Walking with Pastoralists. Retrospective Reflections on the Everyday and Exceptional Challenges of the Field. In: Storer, L. and A. Shoemaker (Ed.): The Challenges Undisclosed. Reflections on Invisible Experiences of Doctoral Fieldwork. Field Diary (2)
    Vehrs, H.-P.
 
 

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