Gender and property among sedentarized pastoralists of Northern Kenya
View/ Open
Date
2007Author
Mitchell, Judith D
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In the context of growing poverty and sedentarization, the socio-economic status
of pastoral women is an important indicator of how pastoralists in northern Kenya
respond to social change. Accordingly, this study examines women's position in three
communities in distinct settings of sedentarization. One is located in a semi-arid region
dedicated to pastoralism and conservation, while the other two are in a moister mountain
area where rain-fed and irrigation agriculture is combined with animal production.
Analyses of quantitative and qualitative data, gathered from women and men during
2002-2003, indicate that women have largely responded to social change by using two
strategies to secure the well-being of themselves and their children. First, despite the
cultural assumption that married women are supported by their husbands, they have
strengthened their relationships with natal kin, solidifying a support network to carry
them through times of difficulty. Secondly, given decline in returns from subsistence
pastoralism, women have seized numerous opportunities to diversify their economic
pursuits in order to generate steady income.
Essentially, findings illustrate that, in addition to gaining access to various
resources through their marital homes and their own efforts, the majority of women
receive socio-economic support from their natal kin, especially brothers. In two
communities where land is being privatized, most women have been excluded from the
land registration process because of traditional and national policies. However, many
fathers are awarding their daughters permanent usufruct rights to family land to ensure
they do not become landless because of the death of a spouse or negligence on the part of
husbands. Although this does not eliminate the discrimination many women face from
11
being excluded from the registration process, it is a move towards the betterment of
women's long-term food and financial security.
Besides contributing to domestic activities, women engage in very different forms
of income-generating activities; in Archer's Post, they obtain earnings from craft sales or
tourist-related services, in ParkishoniKarare they gain income from milk-marketing,
while in Songa, women pursue cultivation for subsistence and market sale. It is a
positive finding that most women generate steady income over which they have managed
to maintain control.
Citation
Degree of Doctor of PhilosophyPublisher
McGill University, Montreal Department of Anthropology