Livestock-wealth inequalities and uptake of crop cultivation among the Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania

We examine livestock-wealth inequality by gender and age of the household head among Maasai households located in areas of contrasting land tenure and land productivity in the Amboseli, Athi-Kaputiei and Maasai Mara regions of Kenya and Tarangire-Manyara Region of Tanzania. We also investigate wheth...

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Autores principales: Nkedianye, D.K., Ogutu, Joseph O., Said, Mohammed Yahya, Kifugo, S.C., Leeuw, Jan de, Gardingen, P.V., Reid, Robin S.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106574
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author Nkedianye, D.K.
Ogutu, Joseph O.
Said, Mohammed Yahya
Kifugo, S.C.
Leeuw, Jan de
Gardingen, P.V.
Reid, Robin S.
author_browse Gardingen, P.V.
Kifugo, S.C.
Leeuw, Jan de
Nkedianye, D.K.
Ogutu, Joseph O.
Reid, Robin S.
Said, Mohammed Yahya
author_facet Nkedianye, D.K.
Ogutu, Joseph O.
Said, Mohammed Yahya
Kifugo, S.C.
Leeuw, Jan de
Gardingen, P.V.
Reid, Robin S.
author_sort Nkedianye, D.K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description We examine livestock-wealth inequality by gender and age of the household head among Maasai households located in areas of contrasting land tenure and land productivity in the Amboseli, Athi-Kaputiei and Maasai Mara regions of Kenya and Tarangire-Manyara Region of Tanzania. We also investigate whether livestock-poor households are more likely to diversify their livelihood options from pastoralism to include crop cultivation. Livestock wealth inequality was high in each of the four sites. Surprisingly, the Tarangire-Manyara site in Tanzania had the highest levels of inequality despite the fact that Tanzania had recently had a socialist political system while Kenya had been capitalistic since independence in 1963. The disparities in livestock assets between the rich and the poor households were lowest in the Maasai Mara site. Also, there was no direct relationship between low livestock wealth and the probability that a household would take up crop cultivation. However, areas under cultivation were the largest in Tarangire-Manyara and the lowest in Amboseli, possibly reflecting the influence of land tenure policy in Tarangire-Manyara and low rainfall in Amboseli. Most male headed households had more livestock wealth than female headed households. In Maasailand, high livestock-wealth inequalities and a growing restriction on livestock mobility, compounded with internal and external population pressures and land fragmentation, are likely to reduce pastoral resilience to droughts that are becoming more frequent and severe due to a warming global climate and widening climatic variability.
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spelling CGSpace1065742025-09-25T13:01:45Z Livestock-wealth inequalities and uptake of crop cultivation among the Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania Nkedianye, D.K. Ogutu, Joseph O. Said, Mohammed Yahya Kifugo, S.C. Leeuw, Jan de Gardingen, P.V. Reid, Robin S. gender livelihoods livestock pastoralism households land tenure We examine livestock-wealth inequality by gender and age of the household head among Maasai households located in areas of contrasting land tenure and land productivity in the Amboseli, Athi-Kaputiei and Maasai Mara regions of Kenya and Tarangire-Manyara Region of Tanzania. We also investigate whether livestock-poor households are more likely to diversify their livelihood options from pastoralism to include crop cultivation. Livestock wealth inequality was high in each of the four sites. Surprisingly, the Tarangire-Manyara site in Tanzania had the highest levels of inequality despite the fact that Tanzania had recently had a socialist political system while Kenya had been capitalistic since independence in 1963. The disparities in livestock assets between the rich and the poor households were lowest in the Maasai Mara site. Also, there was no direct relationship between low livestock wealth and the probability that a household would take up crop cultivation. However, areas under cultivation were the largest in Tarangire-Manyara and the lowest in Amboseli, possibly reflecting the influence of land tenure policy in Tarangire-Manyara and low rainfall in Amboseli. Most male headed households had more livestock wealth than female headed households. In Maasailand, high livestock-wealth inequalities and a growing restriction on livestock mobility, compounded with internal and external population pressures and land fragmentation, are likely to reduce pastoral resilience to droughts that are becoming more frequent and severe due to a warming global climate and widening climatic variability. 2019-06 2020-01-15T12:48:40Z 2020-01-15T12:48:40Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106574 en Open Access Elsevier Nkedianye, D.K., Ogutu, J.O., Said, M.Y., Kifugo, S., Leeuw, J. de, Gardingen, P.V. and Reid, R.S. 2019. Livestock-wealth inequalities and uptake of crop cultivation among the Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania. World Development Perspectives 14:1-10.
spellingShingle gender
livelihoods
livestock
pastoralism
households
land tenure
Nkedianye, D.K.
Ogutu, Joseph O.
Said, Mohammed Yahya
Kifugo, S.C.
Leeuw, Jan de
Gardingen, P.V.
Reid, Robin S.
Livestock-wealth inequalities and uptake of crop cultivation among the Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania
title Livestock-wealth inequalities and uptake of crop cultivation among the Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania
title_full Livestock-wealth inequalities and uptake of crop cultivation among the Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania
title_fullStr Livestock-wealth inequalities and uptake of crop cultivation among the Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Livestock-wealth inequalities and uptake of crop cultivation among the Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania
title_short Livestock-wealth inequalities and uptake of crop cultivation among the Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania
title_sort livestock wealth inequalities and uptake of crop cultivation among the maasai of kenya and tanzania
topic gender
livelihoods
livestock
pastoralism
households
land tenure
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106574
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