Revenues on the hoof: livestock trade, taxation and state-making in the Somali territories

Author(s):  
Ahmed M. Musa ◽  
Finn Stepputat ◽  
Tobias Hagmann
Keyword(s):  
Rangelands ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
KC Olson ◽  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Fred Zaal ◽  
Morgan Ole Siloma ◽  
Rachel Andiema ◽  
Albino Kotomei

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Moh A. Alkhamis ◽  
Cecilia Aguilar-Vega ◽  
Nicholas M. Fountain-Jones ◽  
Kai Lin ◽  
Andres M. Perez ◽  
...  

AbstractBluetongue virus (BTV) epidemics are responsible for worldwide economic losses of up to US$ 3 billion. Understanding the global evolutionary epidemiology of BTV is critical in designing intervention programs. Here we employed phylodynamic models to quantify the evolutionary characteristics, spatiotemporal origins, and multi-host transmission dynamics of BTV across the globe. We inferred that goats are the ancestral hosts for BTV but are less likely to be important for cross-species transmission, sheep and cattle continue to be important for the transmission and maintenance of infection between other species. Our models pointed to China and India, countries with the highest population of goats, as the likely ancestral country for BTV emergence and dispersal worldwide over 1000 years ago. However, the increased diversification and dispersal of BTV coincided with the initiation of transcontinental livestock trade after the 1850s. Our analysis uncovered important epidemiological aspects of BTV that may guide future molecular surveillance of BTV.


Africa ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 131-149 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael L. Fleisher

AbstractAmong the agro-pastoral Kuria people of East Africa, whose population straddles the border between Tanzania and Kenya, many young men are engaged in an illicit, violent livestock trade in which cattle stolen in Tanzania are sold to Tanzanian or Kenyan buyers for cash. This raiding is inextricably bound up with the phenomenon of warfare between mutually antagonistic Kuria clans, which not only serves to legitimise raids on the enemy's cattle herds so long as the fighting rages but which also fosters and sustains an atmosphere of inter-clan enmity that lends support to cattle raiding, particularly on the herds of former adversaries, even after hostilities have ended. Clan warfare emerges as both a cause and an effect of raiding as well as serving as a training ground for novice raiders. On the basis of field research in the Tarime District lowlands, the article argues that although Kuria cattle raiding, oriented to the cash market, owes its existence to capitalist penetration and is driven by the rising demand for cattle, particularly in Kenya, it remains heavily dependent on inter-clan warfare, which has two main causes: animosity engendered by commercialised cattle raiding, and boundary adjustments initiated by the government, either for administrative reasons or, paradoxically, in an effort to resolve existing disputes over access to pasture, grazing and water.


Nature Food ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (6) ◽  
pp. 326-326
Author(s):  
Annisa Chand
Keyword(s):  

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