4.2 Article

Land, livelihoods and belonging: negotiating change and anticipating LAPSSET in Kenya's Lamu county

Journal

JOURNAL OF EASTERN AFRICAN STUDIES
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages 310-331

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17531055.2020.1743068

Keywords

LAPSSET; developmemt corridors; land; belonging; Lamu; Kenya

Funding

  1. Agricultural Policy Research in Africa programme of the Future Agricultures Consortium

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To attract investments in mineral extraction, physical infrastructure and agricultural commercialization over a vast swathe of Northern Kenya, national politicians and bureaucrats are casting the area as being both abundant with land and resources, and as, conversely, 'backward', 'unexploited' and 'empty'. Drawing on evidence from Lamu County, and focusing on the planned Lamu Port and South Sudan Ethiopia Transport (LAPSSET) corridor, this article contends that such high-modernist and 'new frontier' discourses are usually complicated by the realities on the ground. Based on common perceptions about land and ethnicity, and how these are intertwined with the politics of belonging and redistribution, these realities exemplify complex economies of anticipation - through which networks of patronage, alliance, and mobilization are being created or entrenched in advance of major investments. This article argues that it is these anticipations - more than official designs - that will determine the future direction of LAPSSET, especially in respect to who will get what, when and how, within its promised prosperous future.

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