Green economy, degradation narratives, and land-use conflicts in Tanzania
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
Bergius, Mikael; Tor Arve Benjaminsen; Faustin P. Maganga & Halvard Buhaug (2020) Green economy, degradation narratives, and land-use conflicts in Tanzania, World Development 129: 104850–.
The
implementation of the green economy in Tanzania is currently re-arranging space
in significant ways. The
Southern Agricultural Growth Corridor of Tanzania (SAGCOT) has been presented
by the government as well as
investors and aid donors as a model for the green economy in Africa combining
investments in large-scale
farming with environmental conservation. The Kilombero valley is centrally
situated within SAGCOT and has
become a national hotspot of land-use conflicts. The valley is dominated by an
expanding sector of agricultural capital investments combined with a
substantial increase in areas under environmental conservation. While some
smallholder farmers are dispossessed through these expansions, others are contracted as outgrowers.
Pastoralists are, however, only in the way, and are also thought to cause widespread environmental
degradation. This is a long-held view, which also plays a key role in the implementation of SAGCOT. It has led
to a series of pastoral evictions in the country. In 2012, ‘Operation Save Kilombero’ was implemented
consisting of violent evictions of all pastoralists from the valley. This eviction had been planned to
conserve the wetland ecosystem that was seen by the government and aid donors
to be threatened by pastoral overstocking. The arrival of the green economy in Kilombero re-enforced the perceived need to
clear the valley of livestock and pastoralists to conserve the environment and make space for
investments in agriculture. The pastoral eviction in Kilombero in 2012 was also only one in a series; every
eviction leading to the spill-over of pastoralists to other areas creating new farmer-herder conflicts as
well as conservation conflicts. While land-use conflicts in Africa are commonly thought to be caused by natural
resource scarcity and environmental degradation mainly resulting from population growth, we
demonstrate how degradation narratives may themselves be a key driver of conflicts, in this case to
legitimize and pave the way for agricultural investments and environ-mental conservation under a ‘green economy’.
Read the article here (Open Access)
Authors
Associate Research Professor