Fragmenting the Commons: The Transformation of Property Rights in Kenya's Maasailand (Research Proposal)
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Date
2001
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Abstract
"This dissertation research explores the process by which property rights to land in Kenya's Maasailand1 are transforming from communally owned and managed parcels to individually-held, private units. It also explores the environmental outcomes of privatization in an ecosystem that is typically characterized as arid to semi-arid. The research anticipates that much of the process of transformation may be an endogenous reaction by ordinary Maasai to various influences. Privatization may be a mechanism to guard against increased encroachment and dispossession of their land by wealthy/powerful Maasai elite and an increasing population of cultivating, non-Maasai immigrants. It may also be a response to pressure by Maasai youth who envision greater access to credit for land development activities that individual titling suggests. This research also anticipates that transformation into individual units is likely to result in a deteriorating range characterized by a higher proportion invasive species that are unpalatable to livestock."
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property rights, rangelands, common pool resources, institutions, Maasai (African people), pastoralism, privatization