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The Impact of Herder Sedentarization on Natural Resource Access in Northeastern Ghana
Authors:Rita Yembilah  Miriam Grant
Affiliation:1. Department of General Education , Mount Royal University , Calgary , Alberta , Canada;2. Community, Culture and Global Studies , University of British Columbia Okanagen , Kelowna , British Columbia , Canada
Abstract:The Fulani of West Africa have increasingly migrated to humid West Africa since the Sahelian droughts of the 1970s, drawing opposition from indigenous groups that are concerned about the deprivation of their livelihood and monopolization of resources for herders’ livestock. This research, which involved farmers, shepherds, and Fulani herders, addressed three issues: the nature of indigenous grazing and watering regimes, shepherd–herder relations, and herders’ impact on resource access for indigenes’ livestock. The research indicates that in-community and off-community platforms for resource access exist. The former has not been impacted by the herders; the latter has experienced changes insufficient to constitute an overhaul of resource access at the expense of indigenes’ livestock. Instead, a “shepherd–herder” category of resource access has emerged that is characterized by negotiation for resource space, opening avenues for addressing broader resource access issues, and typically tense indigene–herder relationships.
Keywords:Fulani herders’ settlement  Ghana  livestock management  resource access  West Africa
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