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Close-up on renewable resources and armed conflict: The spatial logic of pastoralist violence in northern Kenya
Affiliation:1. Susquehanna University, United States;2. Barnard College, United States;3. The University of Colorado at Boulder, United States;1. University of Washington, USA;2. Dartmouth College, USA;1. Department of Geography, McGill University, 805 Sherbrooke St. W., Montreal, QC, Canada H3A 2K6;2. Faculty of Economic and Social Studies, University of Khartoum, Box 321, Khartoum 11115, Sudan;1. Department of Geography, University of Utah, United States;2. Institute of Behavioral Science and Department of Geography, University of Colorado Boulder, United States;3. Institute of Behavioral Science and Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado Boulder, United States;4. Institute of Behavioral Science and Department of Political Science, University of Colorado Boulder, United States;5. Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Alaska Anchorage, United States
Abstract:Methods of spatially disaggregated conflict analysis are becoming increasingly popular and open avenues for systematic micro-level research. Especially within the field of environmental security research they bear the promise of a better assessment of environment–conflict linkages at the sub-national level. Yet, this branch of research lacks a thorough theoretical involvement with the spatial logic of armed contests over renewable resources and this hampers the use of highly disaggregated data. To address this shortcoming, the present contribution proposes an actor-centred approach, which allows determining the precise locations of violent events in armed contests over renewable resources. It is developed by analysing the spatial logic of pastoralist violence in northern Kenya, a frequently cited example of scarcity-related struggle over renewable resources. The analysis demonstrates that pastoralist violence in northern Kenya has frequently occurred close to well sites and in locations of higher rainfall, which offer favourable conditions for livestock raiding. These results lend support to narratives of pastoralist violence, which emphasise the strategic use of violence with regard to the ecological opportunities and constraints of African rangelands. They also highlight more generally that conflict locations reveal more about the strategic choices made by armed groups in a given conflict situation than about the ultimate causes of their struggle. This calls for a more conscious use of disaggregated data in environmental security research.
Keywords:Renewable resources  Pastoralist violence  Spatial conflict analysis  Northern Kenya
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