Seasonal and spatial fluctuations in forage quality, accessibility and output provide strong incentives for migratory stock keeping in Central Asia. Over the past century, mobile livestock husbandry has either been suppressed or collapsed and a fragmented pattern of rangeland use has ensued. Policy shifts underlying these processes in Kazakstan are traced. New patterns are evident whereby some flocks are again being moved by season to different pastures. In the market economy, individual families now decide on the costs and benefits of moving their animals. Results are reported from a multidisciplinary study of two rangeland areas in Kazakstan, including a survey of 46 households interviewed quarterly during 2001–2002 and community-level ...
After the breakup of the Soviet Union, the republics of Central Asia began to restructure their agri...
Pastoralists in North-Eastern Afghanistan are exposed to a multitude of contemporary challenges and ...
This paper studies how poor governance has affected herder livelihood in Mongolia's new free-market ...
A nomadic way of life has long been a defining characteristic of the Kazak people, both in the imagi...
Livestock mobility was an essential characteristic of Kazakh livestock production systems, allowing ...
Despite worldwide trends towards intensive livestock production, some extensive systems retain compa...
There have been studies on how pastoralists assess and choose the resources required for their lives...
Population of all major species of livestock has been constantly increasing over the years with decl...
Large-scale movements allow large herbivores to cope with changes in seasonal forage supply. Pastora...
There is little research on pastoralists’ responses to new expansion opportunities. We explore how p...
This paper briefly narrates the historical and present challenges facing sheep herders in the Kyrgyz...
We examine factors regulating numbers of domestic livestock and saiga an-telopes during the major pe...
Grazing-based livestock production, named pastoralism, is classified into nomadism, transhumance and...
This paper presents an overview of the livestock sector in Central Asia using national statistics an...
Kyrgyzstan is a mountainous country with the livelihood condition of its population determined by cl...
After the breakup of the Soviet Union, the republics of Central Asia began to restructure their agri...
Pastoralists in North-Eastern Afghanistan are exposed to a multitude of contemporary challenges and ...
This paper studies how poor governance has affected herder livelihood in Mongolia's new free-market ...
A nomadic way of life has long been a defining characteristic of the Kazak people, both in the imagi...
Livestock mobility was an essential characteristic of Kazakh livestock production systems, allowing ...
Despite worldwide trends towards intensive livestock production, some extensive systems retain compa...
There have been studies on how pastoralists assess and choose the resources required for their lives...
Population of all major species of livestock has been constantly increasing over the years with decl...
Large-scale movements allow large herbivores to cope with changes in seasonal forage supply. Pastora...
There is little research on pastoralists’ responses to new expansion opportunities. We explore how p...
This paper briefly narrates the historical and present challenges facing sheep herders in the Kyrgyz...
We examine factors regulating numbers of domestic livestock and saiga an-telopes during the major pe...
Grazing-based livestock production, named pastoralism, is classified into nomadism, transhumance and...
This paper presents an overview of the livestock sector in Central Asia using national statistics an...
Kyrgyzstan is a mountainous country with the livelihood condition of its population determined by cl...
After the breakup of the Soviet Union, the republics of Central Asia began to restructure their agri...
Pastoralists in North-Eastern Afghanistan are exposed to a multitude of contemporary challenges and ...
This paper studies how poor governance has affected herder livelihood in Mongolia's new free-market ...