This edited volume examines the changes that arise from the entanglement of global interests and narratives with the local struggles that have always existed in the drylands of Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia/Inner Asia.
Changes in drylands are happening in an overwhelming manner. Climate change, growing political instability, and increasing enclosures of large expanses of often common land are some of the changes with far-reaching consequences for those who make their living in the drylands. At the same time, powerful narratives about the drylands as ‘wastelands’ and their ‘backward’ inhabitants continue to hold sway, legitimizing interventions for development, security, and conservation, informing re-emerging frontiers of investment (for agriculture, extraction, infrastructure), and shaping new dryland identities. The chapters in this volume discuss the politics of change triggered by forces as diverse as the global land and resource rush, the expansion of new Information and Communication Technologies, urbanization, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the spread of violent extremism. While recognizing that changes are co-produced by differently positioned actors from within and outside the drylands, this volume presents the dryland’s point of view. It therefore takes the views, experiences, and agencies of dryland dwellers as the point of departure to not only understand the changes that are transforming their lives, livelihoods, and future aspirations, but also to highlight the unexpected spaces of contestation and innovation that have hitherto remained understudied.
This edited volume will be of much interest to students, researchers, and scholars of natural resource management, land and resource grabbing, political ecology, sustainable development, and drylands in general.
Author(s): Angela Kronenburg García, Tobias Haller, Han van Dijk, Cyrus Samimi, Jeroen Warner
Series: Earthscan Studies in Natural Resource Management
Publisher: Routledge/Earthscan
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 282
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Editors and contributors
Acknowledgements
1 Drylands, frontiers, and the politics of change
PART I: Climate, environment, and narratives
2. Climate variability and institutional flexibility: resource governance at the intersection between ecological instability and mobility in drylands
3. Environmental crisis narratives in drylands
PART II: Resources, institutions, and power
4. Wetlands in drylands: Large-scale appropriations for agriculture, conservation, and mining in Africa
5.Large-scale agricultural investments in drylands: facing some blind spots in the grabbing debate
6. The 'open cut' in drylands: Challenges of artisanal mining and pastoralism encountering industrial mining, development, and resource grabbing
7 Mega-infrastructure projects in drylands: from enchantments to disenchantments
8 The new green grabbing frontier and participation: conserving drylands with or without people
PART III: Conflict, connection, and livelihoods
9 Religious movements in the drylands: ethnicity, jihadism, and violent extremism
10 Making cities in drylands: migration, livelihoods, and policy
11 Drylands connected: mobile communication and changing power positions in (nomadic) pastoral societies
PART IV: Responses and potentials
12 Pastoralists under COVID-19 lockdown: collaborative research on impacts and responses in Kenyan and Mongolian drylands
13 Alternative perspectives: a bright side of natural resource governance in drylands
Index