Author:
Breusers Mark,Nederlof Suzanne,Van Rheenen Teunis
Abstract
Conflicts between farmers and herdsmen are certainly not new
phenomena: they already occurred at the time of the biblical
patriarchs. In West Africa, conflicts over the use of scarce natural
resources between farmers and herdsmen are said to be on the
increase. The occurrence of such conflicts is generally attributed to
growing pressure on natural resources, caused by population increase,
the growth of herds and the extension of cultivated areas outpacing
population growth. That such conflicts appear to oppose two ethnic
groups – generally Fulbe herdsmen versus a population group
of
farmers – is explained by the fact that not only has overall competition
over natural resources increased due to a saturation of space, but that
at the same time a balance between the two groups has been broken.
The convergence of production systems, as a result of farmers engaging
in cattle breeding and herdsmen in agriculture, entailed the disappearance
of both ecological and economic complementarity between
the two groups – a process that is said to have been accelerated
by the
droughts of the 1970s and 1980s. The interpretation of these conflicts
depends on the – sometimes implicit – assumption that formerly,
in an
often unspecified epoch in the past, relations between farmers and
herdsmen could be conceived of in terms of symbiosis – a relationship
based on mutual dependence and mutual advantage with implied
complementarity in the ecological and economic spheres.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
65 articles.
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