Book Chapter

The Politics of Land, Resources & Investment in Eastern Africa’s Pastoral Drylands

Published on 1 January 2020

The rush for land and resources has featured prominently in recent studies of sub-Saharan Africa.

Often happening alongside regional projects to upgrade and expand infrastructure, this urgency to unlock untapped economic potential has generated heated debate around the social and environmental impacts, as well as consequences for livelihoods, rights and benefit sharing. More than ever before, the gaze of global investment has been directed to the pastoral drylands of Africa. This matters because of the varied land and natural resource uses, social organisation and the histories and legacies of development that are unique to these areas. Given ecological uncertainty and the patchy distribution of resources, adaptability and flexibility have been the basis for sustaining lives and livelihoods in the drylands (Catley et al. 2013b; Mortimore and Adams 1999; Scoones 1994).

Cite this publication

Lind, J., Okenwa, D. and Scoones, I. (2020) 'The Politics of Land, Resources & Investment in Eastern Africa’s Pastoral Drylands', in Lind, J., Okenwa, D. and Scoones, I. (eds), Land Investment & Politics: Reconfiguring Eastern Africa's Pastoral Drylands, Suffolk: James Currey

Authors

Jeremy Lind

Professorial Fellow

Doris Okenwa

Editors

Ian Scoones

Professorial Fellow

Publication details

published by
James Currey
isbn
978-1-84701-252-4
language
English

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About this publication

Region
Africa

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