De-/Fencing Grasslands: Ongoing Boundary Making and Unmaking in Postcolonial Kenya

Across contemporary East Africa, fencing is spreading with incredible speed over hundreds of thousands of hectares of rangelands, fundamentally reconfiguring land tenure dynamics. But why is this happening now, what are the precursors, and what will happen in the years to come? In this article, we a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mette Løvschal, Marie Ladekjær Gravesen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-07-01
Series:Land
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/10/8/786
id doaj-92f72d0bc7d34fa393f62d37cc009be4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-92f72d0bc7d34fa393f62d37cc009be42021-08-26T13:58:31ZengMDPI AGLand2073-445X2021-07-011078678610.3390/land10080786De-/Fencing Grasslands: Ongoing Boundary Making and Unmaking in Postcolonial KenyaMette Løvschal0Marie Ladekjær Gravesen1Department of Archaeology and Heritage Studies, Aarhus University, Moesgaard Allé 20, 8270 Højbjerg, DenmarkDanish Institute for International Studies, Østbanegade 117, 2100 København, DenmarkAcross contemporary East Africa, fencing is spreading with incredible speed over hundreds of thousands of hectares of rangelands, fundamentally reconfiguring land tenure dynamics. But why is this happening now, what are the precursors, and what will happen in the years to come? In this article, we ask how pre- and post-colonial landscape gridding perpetuate a slow violence across the landscape through processes of de-/fencing. Fencing, we argue, is embedded in a landscape logic that favours exclusive rights and conditioned access. In two case studies from grazing lands in Kenya, we explore how people engage with the tension of an imposed landscape logic of fencing by either asserting or challenging its very physicality. We propose that de-/fencing are ways of anticipating long-standing land tenure uncertainties. Moreover, we use our cases to explore different points of reference along the mattering of land tenure boundaries as well as the sort of horizons to which fencing leads. We also use this knowledge to improve our understanding of parallel prehistoric cases of large-scale landscape enclosure. By unfolding the intertwined socio-political and material nature of gridded landscapes, we seek to bring the study of fencing out of conservation literature and into its wider culture-historical context.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/10/8/786fencingpastoralismKenyaEast Africapost-colonialismland-use
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mette Løvschal
Marie Ladekjær Gravesen
spellingShingle Mette Løvschal
Marie Ladekjær Gravesen
De-/Fencing Grasslands: Ongoing Boundary Making and Unmaking in Postcolonial Kenya
Land
fencing
pastoralism
Kenya
East Africa
post-colonialism
land-use
author_facet Mette Løvschal
Marie Ladekjær Gravesen
author_sort Mette Løvschal
title De-/Fencing Grasslands: Ongoing Boundary Making and Unmaking in Postcolonial Kenya
title_short De-/Fencing Grasslands: Ongoing Boundary Making and Unmaking in Postcolonial Kenya
title_full De-/Fencing Grasslands: Ongoing Boundary Making and Unmaking in Postcolonial Kenya
title_fullStr De-/Fencing Grasslands: Ongoing Boundary Making and Unmaking in Postcolonial Kenya
title_full_unstemmed De-/Fencing Grasslands: Ongoing Boundary Making and Unmaking in Postcolonial Kenya
title_sort de-/fencing grasslands: ongoing boundary making and unmaking in postcolonial kenya
publisher MDPI AG
series Land
issn 2073-445X
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Across contemporary East Africa, fencing is spreading with incredible speed over hundreds of thousands of hectares of rangelands, fundamentally reconfiguring land tenure dynamics. But why is this happening now, what are the precursors, and what will happen in the years to come? In this article, we ask how pre- and post-colonial landscape gridding perpetuate a slow violence across the landscape through processes of de-/fencing. Fencing, we argue, is embedded in a landscape logic that favours exclusive rights and conditioned access. In two case studies from grazing lands in Kenya, we explore how people engage with the tension of an imposed landscape logic of fencing by either asserting or challenging its very physicality. We propose that de-/fencing are ways of anticipating long-standing land tenure uncertainties. Moreover, we use our cases to explore different points of reference along the mattering of land tenure boundaries as well as the sort of horizons to which fencing leads. We also use this knowledge to improve our understanding of parallel prehistoric cases of large-scale landscape enclosure. By unfolding the intertwined socio-political and material nature of gridded landscapes, we seek to bring the study of fencing out of conservation literature and into its wider culture-historical context.
topic fencing
pastoralism
Kenya
East Africa
post-colonialism
land-use
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/10/8/786
work_keys_str_mv AT metteløvschal defencinggrasslandsongoingboundarymakingandunmakinginpostcolonialkenya
AT marieladekjærgravesen defencinggrasslandsongoingboundarymakingandunmakinginpostcolonialkenya
_version_ 1721192179748044800