Climate change, violent conflict and local institutions in Kenya’s drylands

Author:

Adano Wario R1,Dietz Ton2,Witsenburg Karen3,Zaal Fred4

Affiliation:

1. Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle/Saale

2. African Studies Centre, Leiden

3. Both ENDS, Amsterdam & Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle/Saale

4. Royal Tropical Institute, Amsterdam

Abstract

Many regions that are endowed with scarce natural resources such as arable land and water, and which are remote from a central government, suffer from violence and ethnic strife. A number of studies have looked at the convergence of economic, political and ecological marginality in several African countries. However, there is limited empirical study on the role of violence in pastoral livelihoods across ecological and geographical locations. Yet, case studies focusing on livelihood and poverty issues could inform us about violent behaviour as collective action or as individual decisions, and to what extent such decisions are informed or explained by specific climatic conditions. Several case studies point out that violence is indeed an enacted behaviour, rooted in culture and an accepted form of interaction. This article critically discusses the relevance of geographical and climatic parameters in explaining the connection between poverty and violent conflicts in Kenya’s pastoral areas. These issues are considered vis-à-vis the role institutional arrangements play in preventing violent conflict over natural resources from occurring or getting out of hand. The article uses long-term historical data, archival information and a number of fieldwork sources. The results indicate that the context of violence does not deny its agency in explanation of conflicts, but the institutional set-up may ultimately explain the occurrence of the resource curse.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Safety Research,Sociology and Political Science

Reference59 articles.

1. Adano Wario R, Witsenburg Karen (2004) Surviving pastoral decline: Pastoral sedentarisation, natural resource management and livelihood diversification in Marsabit District, Northern Kenya. PhD dissertation, University of Amsterdam.

2. A Framework to Analyze the Robustness of Social-ecological Systems from an Institutional Perspective

3. Black mischief: crime, protest and resistance in colonial Kenya

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