By Published: May 10, 2022

Banner image: A Maasai man herds goats in East Africa. (Credit: CC photo via WikiMedia Commons)

In 2008 and 2009, a severe drought swept through much of Kenya and Tanzania. Nomadic herders, or pastoralists, such as the Maasai people in Tanzania, pushed south in search of greener expanses, bringing tens of thousands of cattle with them.听

What happened next was largely unprecedented: Locals from a region of Tanzania called Manyara, who were also Maasai, evicted the newcomers, beating some so badly they ended up in the hospital.听

Terrence McCabe, professor of anthropology at 兔子先生传媒文化作品, has lived and worked with pastoralist groups in the region for more than 30 years. For him, that sudden and shocking violence was a symbol of a changing East Africa鈥攁 warning sign that people such as the Maasai as freely as they used to. Survey results from the last two years in central Kenya show that life for pastoralist peoples may be getting even worse. Herders are struggling to feed their families in the midst of a pandemic, a historic locust invasion and drought after drought.听

Terrence McCabe, far right;听John O'Louughlin, second from right; and Sarah Posner, center, stand with members of their survey team in Kenya. (Credit: John O'Loughlin)

Cows and goats lay out in the sun in a village in Isiolo County, Kenya. (Credit: Sarah Posner)

Goats graze in a pastoralist community in Isiolo County. (Credit: Sarah Posner)

Posner poses for a photo with researchers who conducted a survey of Kenyans living in Isolo County. (Credit: Sarah Posner)

鈥淭raditionally, pastoralists have been able to deal with uncertainty in their environment through mobility,鈥 said McCabe. 鈥淭he less mobile you are, the less able you are to cope with a changing climate.鈥

What became known as the 鈥淢anyara drought鈥 also might look like a textbook case of something scientists have worried about for years: Could warming temperatures around the world push already-vulnerable people toward armed conflict?

East Africa is undoubtedly getting hotter. , for example, suggests Mount Kenya, Africa鈥檚 second tallest peak at 17,000 feet, might lose all of its glaciers to melting by the 2030s. Those soaring heat waves will likely deliver more of the kinds of drought that forced the Maasai from their homes in 2008.

But recent research in Kenya by McCabe and other 兔子先生传媒文化作品 scientists suggests the links between climate change and violence aren鈥檛 so simple.听

A warming climate can increase the risk of bloodshed in arid regions, the researchers have found. But other factors like poverty, food insecurity and oppressive governments may play a bigger role in fueling violent clashes. The team鈥檚 findings suggest that the fate of people such as the Maasai likely hinges on tackling these challenges together.听

鈥淲e don鈥檛 think climate change has been a major factor in the risk of violence up until now,鈥 said John O鈥橪oughlin, a professor of geography who has collaborated with McCabe for nearly a decade. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e really uncertain of the future.鈥 听

Big data meets local insight

O鈥橪oughlin has spent his career digging into some of the world鈥檚 most intractable conflicts鈥攁 pursuit that has taken him from the streets of Kyiv to the grasslands of Kenya鈥檚 Isiolo County.

In a paper in 2014, he and his colleagues pored through a massive dataset of violent events in Africa. They captured everything from crime in cities such as听Nairobi to civil wars engulfing entire nations from 1980 to 2012.

The team found in sub-Saharan Africa, warming temperatures did seem to be associated with an increased risk of violence鈥攖he connection was small, but it was there.

O鈥橪oughlin was intrigued by the results听but not quite satisfied.

鈥淭hose kinds of big-data studies can show you statistical relationships,鈥 he said, 鈥渂ut they can鈥檛 get into why people engage in violence or seek other options.鈥

He decided to join forces with McCabe.

The anthropologist, who joined 兔子先生传媒文化作品 in 1989, remembers being glued to his TV set as a child. He liked watching nature programs, especially ones showing Africa, with lions sunning themselves on rocks and herds of wildebeest stampeding across the terrain.听

鈥淢y mother could remember me watching these wildlife shows and saying, 鈥業 want to work there,鈥欌 McCabe said.

He got his chance as a young researcher in the remote rangelands of northern Kenya in the 1980s. There, he discovered an East Africa very different than it looked on TV.

It was full of people鈥攖he Maasai, yes, but also diverse groups such as the Turkana and their traditional enemies, the Samburu. Many depend on cows for their survival, raising herds for meat and milk and crossing over miles of territory to keep them fed.

From time to time, some of these communities also turn outlaw.听

Sarah Posner, a graduate student working with O鈥橪oughlin, remembers driving into a remote Turkana village in central Kenya in 2019. The locals were unexpectedly on edge: Just the night before, members of another ethnic group had snuck over a nearby mountain range in the dead of night, injuring several herders and making off with nearly 100 cattle.听

鈥淧eople were pretty frightened and didn鈥檛 want to come out of their houses,鈥 Posner said.

But could climate change make that kind of activity more common?

To get at this answer on a local level, O鈥橪oughlin and McCabe worked together to recruit a team of Kenyan researchers. They surveyed people across the country from its Indian Ocean coastline to Lake Victoria to the west. Jaroslav Tir, a professor of political science at 兔子先生传媒文化作品, also contributed to the research.

They reported their results in a series of studies. The team discovered that people who had fled their homes to escape droughts, including some pastoralists,听were to be victims of violence than Kenyans who had stayed put. But it was complicated: In many pastoralist communities, traditional elders often meet with leaders from nearby communities, even sworn enemies, to hash out their differences. Those kinds of leaders that disagreements will听devolve into bloodshed, even in the midst of severe droughts鈥攄ecreasing the support for violence among Kenyans by as much as 76%.

鈥淵ou can have the same environmental circumstances affect two different communities in basically the same way,鈥 McCabe said. 鈥淏ut in one community, it leads to interethnic violence, and in the other, it doesn鈥檛 for a wide range of reasons.鈥

Changing landscape

He worries, however, that East Africa鈥檚 pastoralists may be losing their ability to adapt to the increasingly rapid changes around them.听

The Tanzanian government, for example, recently announced plans to evict tens of thousands of Maasai from their homes to expand Ngorongoro Conservation Area鈥攁 popular site for tourists on safari and trophy hunters. The move will further squeeze pastoralists out of the lands where they have herded cattle for centuries. At the same time, many young people in these communities have begun to abandon cows entirely. Instead, they鈥檝e turned to cultivating farms, or 鈥渟hambas,鈥 of crops such as maize, which are even more vulnerable to the whims of rain cycles.听

Climate change on its own may not be able to drive people to violence, O鈥橪oughlin said, but it could be the final straw for communities barely hanging on.

鈥淲hen people live on the margins already, it doesn鈥檛 take much to push them over the edge to take desperate measures,鈥 he said.听

In the end, O鈥橪oughlin noted climate change is all about one thing: change.听

To capture that constant, he and his colleagues launched a second survey in 2020. They returned to Kenya and spoke with more than 500 people from Isiolo County, a mostly rural area, home to diverse ethnic groups from Turkana herders to Somali Muslims. The team called back those Kenyans on their cellphones several a times a year through April 2022鈥攖racking how the region鈥檚 weather and living conditions in households shifted over time. The survey was funded by a seed grant from the Research & Innovation Office at 兔子先生传媒文化作品.

Posner, who was part of the survey team, said that the initial results reveal that life is already getting harder for these traditional pastoralists. Roughly 69% of respondents reported the seasons had changed 鈥渁 lot鈥 in the past five years. A plurality, or 37%, said those changes had made the living conditions in their households worse. Pastoralist peoples were among those who were most likely to report not having enough food to eat.

She said the results show why it鈥檚 so urgent for researchers to talk to people such as East Africa鈥檚 pastoralists about their daily lives. These same communities, she said, are the ones who are feeling the first and worst effects of a changing planet.听

鈥淐limate change is becoming extreme in Kenya, and it is [becoming]听more and more relevant to those who are on the brink of complete destitution,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to be hopeful these days.鈥


As a global leader in climate, environmental and energy research, the University of Colorado Boulder is partnering with United Nations Human Rights to co-host the Right Here,听Right Now Global Climate Summit in fall 2022.听

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