Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-42gr6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-19T06:04:24.728Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Pastoralists and Violent Conflict along the Oromia–Somali Border in Eastern Ethiopia: Institutional Options toward Peacebuilding

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 July 2022

Abstract

Four theories are used to explain the causes and dynamics of violent conflict along the Oromia–Somali Border in eastern Ethiopia. Of these, political economy (greed versus grievance) and political ecology theories are instrumental in understanding the main drivers of violence. Politicization of ethnicity and the self-centered behavior of political elites have increased the complexity of the conflict. Fekadu Kenee demonstrates that peacebuilding efforts require respect for the outcomes of referendums on the disputed territorial units and revitalization of customary systems, among others. While customary institutions can resolve conflicts at least temporarily, sustained community dialogue needs to be part of the political reform to build lasting inter-regional peace.

Résumé

Résumé

Quatre théories sont utilisées pour expliquer les causes et dynamiques du conflit violent le long de la frontière Oromia-somalienne dans l’est de l’Éthiopie. Parmi celles-ci, les théories de l’économie politique (entre la cupidité et le grief) et de l’écologie politique permettent de comprendre les principaux facteurs de la violence. La politisation de l’ethnicité et le comportement égocentrique des élites politiques ont accru la complexité du conflit. Fekadu Kenee démontre que les efforts de consolidation de la paix exigent, notamment, le respect des résultats des référendums sur les unités territoriales contestées et une revitalisation des systèmes coutumiers. Si les institutions coutumières peuvent résoudre les conflits, au moins temporairement, un dialogue communautaire soutenu doit faire partie de la réforme politique pour construire une paix interrégionale durable.

Resumo

Resumo

Utilizam-se quatro teorias para explicar as causas e a dinâmica do conflito violento ao longo da fronteira Oromia-Somali, na Etiópia Oriental. Destas, as teorias da economia política (ganância versus denúncia) e da ecologia política são fundamentais para compreender os principais motores da violência. A politização da etnicidade e o comportamento egocêntrico das elites políticas fomentaram a complexidade do conflito. Fekadu Kenee demonstra que os esforços de construção da paz exigem o respeito pelos resultados dos referendos sobre as unidades territoriais disputadas e uma revitalização dos sistemas tradicionais, entre outros. Embora as instituições habituais possam resolver conflitos pelo menos temporariamente, é preciso que o diálogo comunitário sustentado faça parte da reforma política, a fim de construir uma paz inter-regional duradoura.

Type
Forum: Farmer-Pastoralist Interactions and Resource-Based Conflicts in Africa: Drivers, Actors, and Pathways to Conflict Transformation and Peacebuilding
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the African Studies Association

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Fekadu., Adugna 2012. “Overlapping nationalist projects and contested spaces: the Oromo–Somali borderlands in southern Ethiopia.” Journal of Eastern African Studies 5: 773–87.Google Scholar
Alemmaya, Mulugeta and Hagmann, Tobias. 2008. “Governing Violence in the Pastoralist Space: Karrayu and State Notions of Cattle Raiding in the Ethiopian Awash Valley.” Afrika Focus 21 (2): 7187.Google Scholar
Alston, Lee J., Libecap, Gary, and Mueller, Bernardo. 1997. “Violence and the development of property rights to land in the Brazilian Amazon.” In Drobak, John N. and John, V.C. Nye (eds.), The Frontiers of the New Institutional Economics, pp. 145–63. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Anam, Syaiful. 2015. “Peacebuilding: The Shift towards a Hybrid Peace Approach.” Global and Strategis 9 (1): 3748.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Asnake, Kefale. 2013. Federalism and Ethnic Conflict in Ethiopia: A Comparative Regional Study. Routledge Series in Federal Studies. Centre for Federal Studies. Kent, UK: University of Kent.Google Scholar
Bassett, T.J. 1988. “The Political Ecology of Peasant-Herder Conflicts in the Northern Ivory Coast.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 78: 453–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baxter, P. T. W. 1978. “Ethiopia’s Unacknowledged Problem.” African Affairs 77 (308): 283–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benjaminsen, Tor A., and Ba, Boubacar. 2019. “Why do pastoralists in Mali join jihadist groups? A political ecological explanation.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 46 (1): 120.Google Scholar
Beyene Kenee, Fekadu. 2013. “Multiple Tournaments and Sustained Defection: Why do negotiations fail to secure resource access between pastoral and agro-pastoral groups in Ethiopia?The Journal of Socio-Economics 42: 7987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beyene Kenee, Fekadu. 2017. “Natural Resource Conflict Analysis among Pastoralists in Southern Ethiopia.” Journal of Peacebuilding and Development 12 (1): 1933.Google Scholar
Bjorkdahl, Annika, and Buckley, Susanne. 2016. Spatialising Peace and Conflict: Mapping the Production of Places, Sites and Scales of Violence. London: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Boege, Volker. 2011. “Potential and limits of traditional approaches in peacebuilding.” The Berghof Handbook II: pp.431–57.Google Scholar
Bohle, H.-G., and Fünfgeld, H.. 2007. “The Political Ecology of Violence in Eastern Sri Lanka.” Development and Change 38 (4): 665–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boku, Tache and Oba, Gufu. 2004. “Policy-Driven Inter-Ethnic Conflicts in Southern Ethiopia.” Review of African Political Economy 36 (121): 409–26.Google Scholar
Burgess, Stephen F. 2009. “Stabilization, Peacebuilding, and Sustainability in the Horn of Africa.” Air and Space Power Journal: Africa and Francophonie (Inaugural Issue) 45–71.Google Scholar
Clapham, Christopher. 1988. Transformation and Continuity in Revolutionary Ethiopia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Collier, Paul. 2000. “Doing Well out of War: An Economic Perspective.” In Berdal, M. and Malone, D. (eds.), Greed and Grievance: Economic Agendas in Civil Wars, pp. 91112. Boulder, Colorado: Lynne Rienner.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collier, Paul. 2006. Economic Causes of Civil Conflict and their Implication for Policy. Washington, D.C.: World Bank.Google Scholar
Dalby, S. 2002Environmental Security. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Demsetz, Harold. 1967. “Toward a Theory of Property Rights.” American Economic Review 57: 347–59.Google Scholar
Dereje, Feyissa. 2013. “Centering the Periphery? The Federal Experience at the Margins of the Ethiopian State.” Ethiopian Journal of Federal Studies 1 (1): 155–92.Google Scholar
Galaty, John. 2016. “Boundary-Making and Pastoral Conflict along the Kenyan–Ethiopian Borderlands.” African Studies Review 59 (1):97122.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ginty, Roger M. 2010. “Hybrid Peace: The Interaction between Top-Down and Bottom-Up Peace.” Security Dialogue 41 (4): 391412.Google Scholar
Gray, Sahra, Sundal, Mary, Wiebusch, Brandi, Little, Michael A., Leslie, Paul W., and Pike, Ivy L.. 2003. “Cattle Raiding, Cultural Survival, and Adaptability of East African Pastoralists.” Current Anthropology 44: 330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hagmann, Tobias. 2014. “Talking Peace in the Ogaden: The Search for an End to Conflict in the Somali Regional State in Ethiopia.” Rift Valley Institute. Nairobi Forum.Google Scholar
Hagmann, Tobias, and Mulugeta, Alemmaya. 2008. “Pastoral conflicts and state-building in the Ethiopian lowlands.” Afrika Spectrum 43 (1):1938.Google Scholar
Hauge, Wenche and Ellingsen, Tanja. 1998. “Beyond Environmental Scarcity: Causal Pathways to Conflict.” Journal of Peace Research 35 (3): 299317.Google Scholar
Homer-Dixon, Thomas F. 2001. Environment, Scarcity and Violence. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Homer-Dixon, Thomas F., Boutwell, Jeffrey H., and Rathjens, George W.. 1993. “Environmental Change and Violent Conflicts.” Scientific American (February): 38–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lederach, John P. 1998. Building Peace: Sustainable Reconciliation in Divided Societies. Washington, D.C.: United States Institute of Peace.Google Scholar
Lederach, John P. 2005. The Moral Imagination, the Art and Soul of Building Peace. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, Herbert S. 1966. “The Origins of the Oromo and Somali People.” Journal of African History 7 (1): 2746.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lober, Trine, and Worm, Peter. 2015. “Pastoral Conflicts and Ethnic Federalism in Ethiopia’s Lowlands: Investigating Complex Power Relations and Emerging Ethnic Identities.” A Research Report by Roskilde University.ENSPAC.Google Scholar
Löwenheim, O., and Steele., B. J. 2010. “Institutions of Violence, Great Power Authority, and the War on Terror.” International Political Science Review 31 (1): 2339.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mousseau, Frederic, and Martin-Prével, Alice. 2016. Miracle or Mirage: Manufacturing Hunger and Poverty in Ethiopia. Oakland, California: Oakland Institute.Google Scholar
Mussa, Mohammed. 2004. “A Comparative Study of Pastoralist Parliamentary Groups: Case Study on the Pastoral Affairs Standing Committee of Ethiopia.” A research report produced for African Union’s Inter-African Bureau of Animal Resources (AU-IBAR). Available at: http://www.ethiopianreview.com/pdf/001/ethiopiafinal.pdf. Accessed October 12, 2018.Google Scholar
Newman, Edward, Paris, Roland, and Richmond, Oliver P.. 2009. New Perspectives on Liberal Peacebuilding. New York: United Nations University Press.Google Scholar
Neumann, R. 2009. “Political ecology: theorizing scale.” Progress in Human Geography 33 (3): 398406.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peet, R., and Watts, M.. 2004. “Liberating Political Ecology.” In Peet, R. and Watts, M. (eds.), Liberation Ecologies: Environment, Development, Social Movements, 2nd edition, pp. 347. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peluso, N., and Watts, M.2001. “Violent Environments.” In Peluso, N. and Watts, M. (eds.), Violent Environments, pp. 338. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Regassa, Debelo. 2012. “Emerging Ethnic Identities and Inter-Ethnic Conflict: The Guji–Burji Conflict in South Ethiopia.” Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism 12(3): 517–33.Google Scholar
Richmond, Oliver P. 2011. A Post-liberal Peace, 1st Edition. (Routledge Studies in Peace and Conflict Resolution). Abingdon, UK: Routledge.Google Scholar
Robbins, P. 2019. Political Ecology: A Critical Introduction, 3rd Edition. Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
Schlee, Günter. 2008. How Enemies Are Made: Towards a Theory of Ethnic and Religious Conflict. Oxford: Berghahn.Google Scholar
Turner, Matthew D. 1999. “Conflict, Environmental Change, and Social Institutions in Dryland Africa: Limitations of the Community Resource Management Approach.” Society and Natural Resources 12 (7): 643–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Unruh, John D. 2006. “Changing conflict resolution institutions in the Ethiopian pastoral commons: The role of armed confrontation in rule-making.” GeoJournal 64: 225–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar