Litcius/Paper detail

The politics of farmer–herder conflicts and alternative conflict management in Northwest Cameroon

Richard Achia Mbih

2020African Geographical Review46 citationsDOI

Abstract

This study investigates the history and political economy of farmer-herder conflicts using field surveys to advance the theoretical understanding of the linkages between agro-pastoralism and farmer-herder conflicts in Northwest Cameroon (NWC). Although the political ecological factors of environmental change and irrational land use policies seem to be the main drivers of farmer-herder conflicts, economic interests of the colonial and postcolonial administrations of Cameroon greatly contributed to the rise and persistence of farmer-herder conflicts in NWC. Using expert and indigenous agro-ecological knowledge, this study identified alternative farmer-herder conflict management strategies, providing a platform for sustainable agro-pastoral development.

Topics & Concepts

IndigenousPastoralismPoliticsColonialismIrrational numberConflict managementSustainable developmentPolitical economyPolitical scienceDevelopment economicsGeographyLivestockSociologyEconomicsEcologyLawGeometryMathematicsBiologyForestryRangeland Management and Livestock EcologyAgriculture, Land Use, Rural DevelopmentConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management