Current struggles for power, land and resources in Kenyan Maasailand can only be understood in a 100-year context, by returning to the forced moves and land losses of the 1900s and closely examining subsequent complaints about their alleged illegality and long-term impacts. Drawing upon archival research and oral testimony, this article explains why the Maasai community's sense of loss and betrayal is so enduring. Maasai grievances stem from a feeling that they have been betrayed by the British, from the political ambitions of particular Maasai leaders, and from historical divisions between different groups of Maasai. Entangled with all these reasons for grievance is the use of history and myth in constructing nationalist and bounded identi...
This essay examines contemporary political discourses about the Mau Mau insurgence, which took place...
This dissertation deals with the problem of human-wildlife conflicts in Kenya from 1850 to 2000 and ...
This paper explores how white Kenyans descended from colonial settlers understand their own entitle...
This dissertation examines the two major forced moves of the Maasai in British East Africa in the 19...
The history of the Maasai moves, land alienation and resistance in colonial British East Africa. In...
This article analyzes the contested historical narrative behind the Mbeere’s role in the Mau Mau mov...
Exploitation of soda deposits by foreign companies at Lake Magadi, Kenya, is the focus of one of man...
During the British Empire’s colonial occupation of Kenya, which began in 1895, a new sense of Kenyan...
Historical revisionism is equally appealing to state and non-state actors during periods of intense ...
Globally, land related conflicts have deep social implications; they lead to deaths, hate, intimidat...
This thesis examines how the Maasai of Tanzania and Kenya are being deprived of their culture. The l...
The chapter discusses the contested legacy of the Mau Mau conflict in Kenya in the 1950s, a struggle...
This is a case study about the Maasai and their land rights. The Maasai are semi-nomadic pastoralist...
The recent wave of subdivision of Maasai group ranches is not an isolated event, but rather part of ...
This article pursues the debate on the role that various regional leaders in late pre- to colonial K...
This essay examines contemporary political discourses about the Mau Mau insurgence, which took place...
This dissertation deals with the problem of human-wildlife conflicts in Kenya from 1850 to 2000 and ...
This paper explores how white Kenyans descended from colonial settlers understand their own entitle...
This dissertation examines the two major forced moves of the Maasai in British East Africa in the 19...
The history of the Maasai moves, land alienation and resistance in colonial British East Africa. In...
This article analyzes the contested historical narrative behind the Mbeere’s role in the Mau Mau mov...
Exploitation of soda deposits by foreign companies at Lake Magadi, Kenya, is the focus of one of man...
During the British Empire’s colonial occupation of Kenya, which began in 1895, a new sense of Kenyan...
Historical revisionism is equally appealing to state and non-state actors during periods of intense ...
Globally, land related conflicts have deep social implications; they lead to deaths, hate, intimidat...
This thesis examines how the Maasai of Tanzania and Kenya are being deprived of their culture. The l...
The chapter discusses the contested legacy of the Mau Mau conflict in Kenya in the 1950s, a struggle...
This is a case study about the Maasai and their land rights. The Maasai are semi-nomadic pastoralist...
The recent wave of subdivision of Maasai group ranches is not an isolated event, but rather part of ...
This article pursues the debate on the role that various regional leaders in late pre- to colonial K...
This essay examines contemporary political discourses about the Mau Mau insurgence, which took place...
This dissertation deals with the problem of human-wildlife conflicts in Kenya from 1850 to 2000 and ...
This paper explores how white Kenyans descended from colonial settlers understand their own entitle...