Livelihood surveys often categorise pastoralist households by economic activity and material assets, using measures such as herd ownership, extent of mobility and the degree of reliance on livestock vs other sources of subsistence and income. However, in contexts of high variability and uncertainty, such objective classifications may inadvertently perpetrate two distortions. First, they stabilise highly fluid economic landscapes, over-looking the ways in which people draw opportunistically from an array of livelihood strategies or move between them over time. Second, they may flatten the social field, overlooking the ways that class and kinship structure and constrain people's livelihood options. This paper argues for greater attention to s...
By asking the question “How do young, urban, professional Kenyans make connections between tribal id...
Global demand to protect endangered wildlife at any cost has corresponded to increasingly more Large...
Abstract Research in northern Kenya presents evidence that livestock herding remains the most import...
In places formerly characterised by the economic and political predominance of mobile pastoralists, ...
Adaptation research often uses identity categories. This article argues that a performativity approa...
Recent literature on pastoralism tends to either portray it as a largely maladaptive practice on the...
Publication online: 1 October 2021Ideas of resilience are not new; they have travelled across severa...
Ethnic identities are best understood as complex and contested social constructs, perpetually in the...
Rural communities of sub-Saharan Africa are under increasing adaptive pressure resulting from declin...
This article draws on long-term ethnographic fieldwork to examine some recent livelihood transformat...
While it is recognised that ascribing an ethnic identity to oneself and others is compatible with al...
The dissertation examines several of the ways in which the places Samburu pastoralists of northern K...
This thesis focuses on how mobility, identity, conceptions of homeland and wellbeing have been trans...
This article addresses livelihood choices and income diversification strategies among agro-pastorali...
ABSTRACT This essay examines the dynamics of the face-to-face inter-ethnic relationship in a multi-e...
By asking the question “How do young, urban, professional Kenyans make connections between tribal id...
Global demand to protect endangered wildlife at any cost has corresponded to increasingly more Large...
Abstract Research in northern Kenya presents evidence that livestock herding remains the most import...
In places formerly characterised by the economic and political predominance of mobile pastoralists, ...
Adaptation research often uses identity categories. This article argues that a performativity approa...
Recent literature on pastoralism tends to either portray it as a largely maladaptive practice on the...
Publication online: 1 October 2021Ideas of resilience are not new; they have travelled across severa...
Ethnic identities are best understood as complex and contested social constructs, perpetually in the...
Rural communities of sub-Saharan Africa are under increasing adaptive pressure resulting from declin...
This article draws on long-term ethnographic fieldwork to examine some recent livelihood transformat...
While it is recognised that ascribing an ethnic identity to oneself and others is compatible with al...
The dissertation examines several of the ways in which the places Samburu pastoralists of northern K...
This thesis focuses on how mobility, identity, conceptions of homeland and wellbeing have been trans...
This article addresses livelihood choices and income diversification strategies among agro-pastorali...
ABSTRACT This essay examines the dynamics of the face-to-face inter-ethnic relationship in a multi-e...
By asking the question “How do young, urban, professional Kenyans make connections between tribal id...
Global demand to protect endangered wildlife at any cost has corresponded to increasingly more Large...
Abstract Research in northern Kenya presents evidence that livestock herding remains the most import...