“They Have Stolen Our Land” Enclosure, Commodification and Patterns of Human-Environment Relations among Afar Pastoralists in Northeastern Ethiopia

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Asebe Regassa Debelo
Georg Klute
Mohammed Detona

Abstract

This paper takes enclosure and commodification processes of “nature” one step beyond a political economy perspective conceptualising them from ontological notions of nature-culture relations. Taking the case of enclosure for large-scale commercial agriculture schemes and a game reserve in northeastern Ethiopia, the paper argues that enclosure and nature commodification are part of neoliberal environmental governance that has been built on the notion of subduing nature and subaltern groups into the power of capitalism. More specifically, while the economic and political dimensions of these processes are salient, the ontological notions of the natureculture dualism has been invoked by states in their justification of expropriating pastoralist lands, thus nullifying indigenous people’s claim to ancestral homelands. The data for this paper was collected from 2013 to 2016 through ethnographic fieldwork, mainly conducted by the authors. The findings show oscillating perceptions of humane-environment relations among the Afar pastoralists: from human-environment, conjointly constituted by humans and non-humans, to the utilitarian dualist approach of environmental use which is mainly caused by the infiltration of capitalist economy and state driven development and conservation projects.

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How to Cite
Regassa Debelo, A., Klute, G., & Detona, M. (2018). “They Have Stolen Our Land”: Enclosure, Commodification and Patterns of Human-Environment Relations among Afar Pastoralists in Northeastern Ethiopia. Modern Africa: Politics, History and Society, 5(2), 127–150. https://doi.org/10.26806/modafr.v5i2.199
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Author Biographies

Asebe Regassa Debelo, Dilla University, Ethiopia

Assistant Professor of Development Studies at Dilla University, Ethiopia. He has published papers in peer reviewed journals and book chapters on a range of themes such as ethnicity and inter-ethnic conflict, indigenous peoples’ rights, cross-border conflicts and challenges of peace-building, nature conservation, the political economy of large-scale agri-business projects and indigenous religious practices. In this line, he extensively researches conflict, violence, peace building, indigenous peoples’ rights and the politics of development in Africa with a particular focus on southern Ethiopiaand Northern Kenya. E-mail: aseberegassa@yahoo.com.

Georg Klute, University of Bayreuth

Member of the Editorial Board of Modern Africa. He is a full professor at Bayreuth University, Germany, where he teaches social and cultural anthropology. His research interests are political anthropology, nomadic studies, and human relations with their environment. E-mail: georg.klute@uni-bayreuth.de.

Mohammed Detona, University of Samera, Ethiopia

He holds a master degree in environment and development from Addis Ababa University. He is currently a lecturer in geography at the University of Samera, Ethiopia and a master of science student in geography of environmetal risk and human security in the United Nation University of Bonn, Germany. His main research is focused on the Afar region in Ethiopia. E-mail: gawane01@gmail.com.