4.3 Article

Not necessarily in the same boat: Heterogeneous risk assessment among east African pastoralists

Journal

JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
Volume 37, Issue 5, Pages 1-30

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00220380412331322101

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This article studies variation in risk assessment by pastoralists in the and and semi-arid lands of southern Ethiopia and northern Kenya. Despite superficial homogeneity among east African pastoralists, we show that there exists considerable within-group heterogeneity in their assessment of various risks. We conceptualise risk as comprising four distinct components: objective exposure, subjective perception, ex ante mitigation capacity, and ex post coping capacity. This conceptualisation provides an effective framework for understanding the observed heterogeneity as the natural consequence of (sometimes modest) structural differences in economic activity patterns, agroclimatic conditions, proximity to towns, wealth, and gender roles. It there re provides a useful tool for drawing out the policy implications of subjects' expressed concerns about prospective livelihood hazards.

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