andy catley: crisis, climate change, conflict or commercialization? the future of pastoralism in the...

6
Crisis, climate change, conflict or commercialization? The future of pastoralism in the Horn of Africa Andy Catley September 2010

Upload: steps-centre

Post on 16-Aug-2015

605 views

Category:

Education


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

  1. 1. Crisis, climate change, conflict or commercialization? The future of pastoralism in the Horn of Africa Andy Catley September 2010
  2. 2. Dominant narratives, 2010
    • Pastoralism in crisis(again)
    • Unprecedented evidence that climate change drives pastoralist vulnerability
    • Destitution, food aid, safety nets
    • The settlement narrative (still) especially government
    • Conflict, counter-insurgency, counter terrorism
    • Quiet narratives, 2010
    • Histories of pastoralism elsewhere (N Africa, Middle East)
    • Human population growth
    • Growing commercialization of livestock production & trade, and benefits by wealth group
    • Land policy
  3. 3. History lessons
    • Pastoralist areas rarely absorb excess people. Excess people are sloughed off - pushed out of pastoralism and pastoralist areas
    • Commercialization and shifting livestock ownership from poor to rich
        • Especially high export areas (Somalia, parts of Ethiopia and Sudan)
        • Displacement processes e.g. Somali central rangeland, from 1980s
    • Declining access to rangeland e.g.
        • Private enclosure
        • Commercial (subsidized) irrigation
        • Bush encroachment
        • Farmers
    • Pastoralism survives in a more commercialized form larger herds (units) owed by fewer people cf. trends in agriculture elsewhere
  4. 4. Trend analysis, from 1922
    • Changes
    • Human population doubling every 25-35 years
    • Decreasing access to productive rangeland
      • - bush encroachment
      • cultivation
      • internal borders
    • Commercialization of pastoralism livestock assets from poor to wealthier groups
    • OutcomesIncreasing impact of dry seasons and drought
    • Constants
    • Rainfall variability
    • Conflict
    Land policies People moving up People moving out
  5. 5. Trends Somaliland, 1922 to 2009
  6. 6. Policy implications
    • Livestock exports for poverty reduction,but benefits mainly wealthier herders, traders etc.
    • Safety nets and the economic logic of retaining increasing numbers of destitute/poor in drylands
    • Alternative livelihoods for a few, but limited non-livestock economic opportunities for most
    • Education