Land Titles Are Fueling Conflict in East Africa's Pastoral Regions
Formalizing communal grazing lands into tradeable private property is triggering resource wars and destabilizing communities across Uganda and Kenya, new research shows. As governments rush to commercialize rangelands for mining and farming, pastoralists are losing access to critical resources—with immediate implications for regional security, investment risk, and humanitarian crises.
Originaltitel: Boundary-making, tenure insecurity, and conflict: regional dynamics of land tenure change and commodification in East Africa's pastoralist rangelands
East Africa's pastoralist rangelands are undergoing unprecedented commercialisation and fragmentation as states seek to exploit the economic potential of the region. Land is rapidly becoming a tradeable asset and communal tenure is being formalised. This article asks how processes of demarcation, formalisation, and increasing commodification of land are impacting tenure security and conflict dynamics for pastoralist and agro-pastoralist communities. We foreground the importance of boundary-making and inter-regional interconnections in our analysis of these processes and their impacts. The article is based primarily on interview data from the neighbouring pastoralist rangelands of Karamoja sub-region, Uganda and West Pokot County, Kenya. A recent rush to acquire land for commercial mining and agriculture in Karamoja, and ongoing land reforms in West Pokot have precipitated land markets and scrambles to demarcate, title, and sell land to benefit from its rising value or to resist its capture by others. Land scrambles and claim-making, alongside more exclusionary ideas of tenure, are having profound impacts on conflict dynamics and tenure insecurity, which as we show often revolves around the materialisation of boundaries. By combining data from West Pokot and Karamoja, the article exemplifies how the recent surge in land commodification alongside demarcation and formalisation – and the impacts on conflict and tenure insecurity – are connected across the region.