Rules of the Range: Natural Resources Management in Kenya–Ethiopia Border Areas

Author(s)
Levine, S. and Pavanello, S.
Publication language
English
Pages
4pp
Date published
01 Apr 2012
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Environment & climate, Shelter and housing, Land issues
Countries
Kenya
Organisations
ODI
Key messages
 
• The management of pastoral mobility is key to the management of livestock, of the rangeland and of community relations in the Horn of Africa. Agencies working with pastoralism cannot look at any one of these issues in isolation, or through purely technical or sectoral lenses. They need to understand the livelihood system institutionally: who makes decisions about access to the range, and how these decisions are enforced.
 
• One of the causes of conflict and rangeland degradation is the erosion of these institutions, which have been undermined by the lack of recognition of pastoral land rights by states in the Horn. Addressing the symptoms without analysing their causes has led to disappointing progress.
 
• Development actors have been involved in creating new institutions, such as peace committees, which are taking decision-making power away from customary institutions. Development actors have a responsibility to understand how these changes affect power relations between pastoralists and the state, between different pastoralist communities and internally within the communities involved.