Disadvantaged Economic Conditions and Stricter Border Rules Shape Afghan Refugees’ Ethnobotany: Insights from Kohat District, NW Pakistan

Author:

Shah Adnan Ali1,Badshah Lal1,Khalid Noor1,Shah Muhammad Ali2,Manduzai Ajmal Khan3,Faiz Abdullah4ORCID,De Chiara Matteo5ORCID,Mattalia Giulia6ORCID,Sõukand Renata6ORCID,Pieroni Andrea47ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Botany, University of Peshawar, Peshawar 25120, Pakistan

2. Department of Botany, Islamia College Peshawar, Peshawar 25120, Pakistan

3. Department of Environmental Science, COMSATS University Islamabad, Abbottabad 22060, Pakistan

4. University of Gastronomic Sciences, 12042 Pollenzo, Italy

5. National Institute for Oriental Languages and Civilizations, 75007 Paris, France

6. Department of Environmental Sciences, Informatics and Statistics, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, 30170 Venice, Italy

7. Department of Medical Analysis, Tishk International University, Erbil 4001, Kurdistan, Iraq

Abstract

The study of migrants’ ethnobotany can help to address the diverse socio-ecological factors affecting temporal and spatial changes in local ecological knowledge (LEK). Through semi-structured and in-depth conversations with ninety interviewees among local Pathans and Afghan refugees in Kohat District, NW Pakistan, one hundred and forty-five wild plant and mushroom folk taxa were recorded. The plants quoted by Afghan refugees living inside and outside the camps tend to converge, while the Afghan data showed significant differences with those collected by local Pakistani Pathans. Interviewees mentioned two main driving factors potentially eroding folk plant knowledge: (a) recent stricter border policies have made it more difficult for refugees to visit their home regions in Afghanistan and therefore to also procure plants in their native country; (b) their disadvantaged economic conditions have forced them to engage more and more in urban activities in the host country, leaving little time for farming and foraging practices. Stakeholders should foster the exposure that refugee communities have to their plant resources, try to increase their socio-economic status, and facilitate both their settling outside the camps and their transnational movement for enhancing their use of wild plants, ultimately leading to improvements in their food security and health status.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference40 articles.

1. UNHCR (2022, October 01). Refugee Data Finder. Available online: https://www.unhcr.org/refugee-statistics/.

2. Experiences of Karen refugees with traditional and western medicine in the USA;Wodniak;Int. J. Migr. Health Soc. Care,2018

3. The ethnobiology and ethnopharmacy of human migrations. Studies in environmental anthropology and ethnobiology;Pieroni;Traveling Cultures and Plants,2007

4. Cross-cultural adaptation in urban ethnobotany: The Colombian folk pharmacopoeia in London;Ceuterick;J. Ethnopharmacol.,2008

5. The use of medicinal plants by migrant people: Adaptation, maintenance, and replacement;Medeiros;Evid.-Based Complement. Altern. Med.,2012

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