Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Political Ecology of Colonial Somaliland

View through CrossRef
AbstractThe social basis of ecological change in Somaliland during the colonial period was politics, especially imperial politics: the division of the Somali country into various colonial spheres, the loss of territory under the 1897 Anglo‐Ethiopian Treaty, and the pacification wars. These events, as it were, reduced the land available for use by the pastoralists, which led to overgrazing, soil erosion and ecological degradation. Moreover, the income of the population declined throughout the colonial period. Even though during the late colonial period the ‘nominal’ price of pastoral goods increased, the ‘real’ price of pastoral commodities did not increase to cover the loss of income caused by inflation and the high cost of imported goods. These two processes—on the one hand ecological degradation and on the other the decline of income—could be understood if they were read contrapuntally. Such reading is possible only if we give full attention to political ecology: why ecology had changed, the politics of that change, and the impact it had on the income and everyday life of the population.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: The Political Ecology of Colonial Somaliland
Description:
AbstractThe social basis of ecological change in Somaliland during the colonial period was politics, especially imperial politics: the division of the Somali country into various colonial spheres, the loss of territory under the 1897 Anglo‐Ethiopian Treaty, and the pacification wars.
These events, as it were, reduced the land available for use by the pastoralists, which led to overgrazing, soil erosion and ecological degradation.
Moreover, the income of the population declined throughout the colonial period.
Even though during the late colonial period the ‘nominal’ price of pastoral goods increased, the ‘real’ price of pastoral commodities did not increase to cover the loss of income caused by inflation and the high cost of imported goods.
These two processes—on the one hand ecological degradation and on the other the decline of income—could be understood if they were read contrapuntally.
Such reading is possible only if we give full attention to political ecology: why ecology had changed, the politics of that change, and the impact it had on the income and everyday life of the population.

Related Results

The Analysis of the Relationship between God, Religion and Politics in Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan and De Cive
The Analysis of the Relationship between God, Religion and Politics in Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan and De Cive
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) was a significant political theorist who could be regarded as the founder of social contract theories. Hobbes’s philosophy is worthy of attention in the h...
Property, Authority and Personal Law: Waqf In Colonial South Asia
Property, Authority and Personal Law: Waqf In Colonial South Asia
British rule in South Asia transformed the economy and society of the subcontinent, in large part by revamping the status of landed property. Colonial law was founded on the notion...
Women’s Work in Fragile States: Evidence from a Firm-Level Dataset in Somaliland
Women’s Work in Fragile States: Evidence from a Firm-Level Dataset in Somaliland
AbstractWhat explains variation in women’s employment in fragile states with conflict-affected histories and limited state capacity? Employment builds stability and including women...
The Political Ecology of Vladimir Arsen’ev
The Political Ecology of Vladimir Arsen’ev
The article describes the life and work of Vladimir Klavdievich Arsen’ev in the context of the development of settler colonial project in the Far East. The article argues that Arse...
Rivers of God, Rivers of Empire: Climate Extremes, Environmental Transformation and Agroecology in Colonial Mexico
Rivers of God, Rivers of Empire: Climate Extremes, Environmental Transformation and Agroecology in Colonial Mexico
This paper explores the social-ecological effects of the Little Ice Age (1300-1850) in colonial Central Mexico. Archival research reconstructs the history of climate, soil, water a...
Post-Political Theatre versus the Theatre of Political Struggle
Post-Political Theatre versus the Theatre of Political Struggle
In this article Bérénice Hamidi-Kim tests the hypothesis that two conflicting interpretations of the notion of ‘political theatre’ exist on the French stage today. She suggests tha...
Reading Our Ruins
Reading Our Ruins
Abstract The essay enquires into what is accepted in academic and political circles as ‘post-colonial’ reality and questions some of the assumptions about its imagination, narr...

Back to Top