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The long road: Ethnoarchaeology, pastoralism and the reconfiguration of archaeological knowledge

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 November 2025

Stefano Biagetti*
Affiliation:
CASEs Research Group, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain ICREA, Passeig Lluís Companys 23, Barcelona, Spain School of Geography, Archaeology and Environmental Studies (GAES), University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa
*
Corresponding author: Stefano Biagetti; Email: stefano.biagetti@upf.edu
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Abstract

This article addresses the transformative role of ethnoarchaeology in reshaping the study of pastoralism. Long marginalized by dominant scientific and political discourses, pastoralism is now increasingly seen as a sophisticated, adaptive livelihood strategy – especially in contexts of high environmental variability. Since pastoralism is predominantly practiced in drylands – arid and semiarid regions historically viewed as peripheral – its study has helped reframe these environments as dynamic landscapes of innovation and resilience. This reevaluation has been pushed, this article argues, also by the contributions of ethnoarchaeology. As a field that bridges past and present, it has enabled the generation of new concepts, the challenge of traditional archaeological frameworks and the integration of Indigenous knowledge systems.

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© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press

Impact statement

This article highlights the role of ethnoarchaeology in transforming how we perceive pastoralist communities and the drylands they inhabit. Historically marginalized, pastoralism has often been seen as backward or environmentally harmful, particularly in arid regions. However, by engaging directly with present-day pastoral societies, it became clear that they are innovators who have developed sophisticated strategies for living sustainably in some of the world’s most challenging environments.

Focusing especially on drylands, this study shows how ethnoarchaeology helps us rethink these landscapes – not as barren peripheries, but as vibrant centers of human creativity and resilience. Through this lens, drylands emerge as places where communities have long practiced dynamic, flexible ways of life that ensure food security and ecological balance. Beyond offering new insights into the past, an ethnoarchaeological approach challenges outdated models of history and development. It promotes a more inclusive and respectful engagement with Indigenous knowledge systems, supporting the broader decolonization of academic research. By showing how ethnoarchaeology can integrate diverse ways of knowing, this work contributes to ongoing efforts to make the discipline more socially relevant, globally informed, and ethically grounded.

Introduction

Ethnoarchaeology has long been more than just a method or an approach within archaeology; it has been an engine for critical reevaluation. This article argues that in the study of pastoralism, ethnoarchaeology acted as a crucial bridge – not only between the living present and the materiality of the past, but also between archaeology and the transformative insights of anthropology, history and ecology. By occupying this vital space, it fostered a conceptual twist, forcing archaeology to confront its own “sedentary” biases and fundamentally reshaping how both the discipline and the study of drylands are understood. This process illuminated the complexity of dryland livelihoods, demonstrating that mobility, adaptation and resilience are central, not marginal, aspects of human–environment relations.

This transformation was catalyzed by a challenge: a growing disconnect between the dynamic, resilient pastoral societies being described by other disciplines in the last quarter of the 20th century and their near-invisibility in the archaeological record. This article reflects on how the effort to solve this methodological problem led to a profound epistemological shift. Ethnoarchaeology became a form of critical practice, compelling the discipline to innovate its methods, challenge well-established frameworks and integrate Indigenous knowledge systems. Ultimately, this process did more than just add pastoralists to the archaeological map. It demonstrated how engaging with the present can decolonize our understanding of the past, making ethnoarchaeology a more ethically grounded and globally relevant science.

Rethinking pastoralism: A transdisciplinary reckoning

For much of the twentieth century, drylands and the pastoral societies inhabiting them were fundamentally misunderstood and often dismissed as marginal or unproductive. Areas receiving less than 450 mm of rainfall per year are typically categorized as “nonproductive” without irrigation (Rockström and Falkenmark, Reference Rockström and Falkenmark2015), yet ethnographic evidence shows that even hyperarid regions support rainfed farming alongside pastoralism, highlighting the adaptability of local practices (Lancelotti et al., Reference Lancelotti, Biagetti, Zerboni, Usai and Madella2019; Biagetti et al., Reference Biagetti, Zurro, Alcaina-Mateos, Bortolini and Madella2021). This failure to recognize the productivity of drylands reflects the marginalization of pastoralism itself. In reality, pastoralism remains the most effective mode of production in these environments, supporting around 25% of the Earth’s land area (FAO, 2020). Through flexible mobility, herd management and labor strategies, pastoralists turn ecological variability into resilience. Yet, for centuries, classical, medieval and colonial traditions cast them as irrational and primitive nomads, contrasting them with agriculturalists. This dichotomy – rooted in sedentary bias – persisted well into modern scholarship (Hammer, Reference Hammer2025: 20–32).

A decisive reappraisal began in the 1980s, though not from within archaeology. Anthropologists such as Hjort (Reference Hjort1982) dismantled the “tragedy of the commons” model, showing that pastoral mobility is a rational adaptation to nonequilibrium environments (see also Fratkin, Reference Fratkin1997 and Sneath, Reference Sneath2007). New Rangeland Ecology (Behnke et al., Reference Behnke, Scoones and Kerven1993) reframed drylands through the lens of variability and resilience, while historians and political ecologists (e.g., Henrichsen, Reference Henrichsen, Bollig, Schnegg and Wotzka2013; Potts, Reference Potts2014) revealed pastoralists as central economic and political actors. This perspective transformed pastoralism from a system in crisis into a model of intelligent adaptation (Krätli and Schareika, Reference Krätli and Schareika2010).

This revaluation, however, exposed a serious disciplinary lag in archaeology, struggling with elusive footprints of ancient pastoralists. The challenge was no longer theoretical but methodological: How to render visible a way of life that left behind ephemeral traces. Ethnoarchaeology – anchored in direct observation of living systems – was uniquely positioned to meet this challenge.

The ethnoarchaeological motor: From theoretical problem to critical practice

The past decade has witnessed a significant revival in the archaeology and ethnoarchaeology of pastoralism. Recently published works, such as Mobile Pastoralist Households (Houle, Reference Houle2024) and The Archaeology of Pastoralism (Hammer, Reference Hammer2025), testify to a field that has matured theoretically and methodologically. A comprehensive review of case studies about the ethnoarchaeology of pastoralism is not the goal here. Instead, this section focuses on the conceptual “motor” that drove this transformation: the convergence of theoretical critique and empirical practice that allowed ethnoarchaeology to regenerate the archaeology of pastoralism.

For much of its history, the archaeology of pastoralism was constrained not merely by weak analogies, but by the dominance of ethnographic models that portrayed pastoral life as static, typological and ecologically predetermined. Influential syntheses, such as Khazanov’s (Reference Khazanov1984) study, presented mobility and herd management as fixed features of cultural taxonomy rather than as dynamic, context-dependent practices. This rigidity left archaeology without the means to engage with the variability and fluidity of pastoral systems, especially in drylands. Faced with this gap, archaeologists increasingly turned toward ethnographic fieldwork themselves – not to borrow analogies, but to build them. It was this turn, exemplified by pioneering work, such as David’s (Reference David1971), Robbins (Reference Robbins1973), Robertshaw’s (Reference Robertshaw1978), Hole’s (Reference Hole and Kramer1979) and Smith’s (Reference Smith, Williams and Faure1980) studies, that transformed the study of pastoralism into an explicitly ethnoarchaeological endeavor. In doing so, it shifted the focus from typological categories to lived processes, from “pastoral types” to adaptive strategies observed in real time (see also Dyson-Hudson and Dyson-Hudson, Reference Dyson-Hudson and Dyson-Hudson1980).

Ethnoarchaeology supplied that engagement. Initially, it emerged defensively – its practitioners seeking to legitimize ethnographic analogy against mainstream skepticism (Biagetti, Reference Biagetti and Smith2020). But through this struggle, it became a laboratory for methodological innovation. By closely observing how social and environmental choices materialize in space (e.g., Cribb, Reference Cribb1991) and in the landscape (e.g., Hole, Reference Hole and Kramer1979), ethnoarchaeologists learned to read the elusive: the spatial logic of camps, the distribution of dung, the layering of trampled floors and the micropatterns of discard. What earlier archaeologists saw as absence became evidence of adaptation. Studies such as those by Chang and Koster (Reference Chang and Koster1986), Brochier et al. (Reference Brochier, Villa, Giacomarra and Tagliacozzo1992) and Shahack-Gross et al. (Reference Shahack-Gross, Marshall and Weiner2003) were pivotal in this regard, demonstrating how penning facilities along with microscopic and geochemical analyses of dung, floors and sediments could reveal patterned human–animal interactions and site formation processes. Through these works, the ephemeral was transformed into a new kind of archaeological visibility – one grounded in the materiality of livestock-related structures, and other in the understanding of the specificity of the traces of animal husbandry.

In this sense, ethnoarchaeology became a two-way bridge: connecting archaeology to both the living present and to theoretical advances in anthropology and ecology. As a bridge to the present, it forced archaeologists to directly observe how complex social dynamics – mobility, household decision making, herd management – translate into material traces. As a bridge to other disciplines, ethnoarchaeology provided the empirical grounding that allowed archaeology to converse with resilience theory and ecological models of nonequilibrium systems (Behnke et al., Reference Behnke, Scoones and Kerven1993; Krätli and Schareika, Reference Krätli and Schareika2010). What ecologists described in theoretical terms, ethnoarchaeologists could demonstrate in the ground: adaptive strategies, flexible land use and resilience as lived, material practice.

By engaging directly with the present, ethnoarchaeology redefined what could count as archaeological evidence. The study of dung layers, hearth residues and trampled sediments was not simply a technical refinement – it was an epistemic one. It expanded the field’s capacity to recognize alternative modes of human–environment engagement, and in doing so, it reconfigured archaeology’s relation to pastoralism itself. Through this process, the archaeology of pastoralism was not only revitalized, but it was also regrounded in the ecological and cultural logic of drylands, seen at last not as marginal landscapes, but as spaces of knowledge, resilience and innovation.

Conclusion

The long trajectory of pastoralist ethnoarchaeology illustrates how methodological struggle can become intellectual transformation. By bridging the present and the past, ethnoarchaeology forced archaeology to confront its assumptions and to rethink what counts as evidence. It turned the elusive into the legible, the ephemeral into the interpretable.

The impact of the ethnoarchaeology of pastoralism is twofold. First, it served as an epistemological catalyst within archaeology. The challenge of materializing mobility compelled archaeologists to engage seriously with Indigenous and local knowledge – not as a theoretical or political stance, but as a methodological necessity. To understand the materiality of mobile lifeways, archaeologists had to learn the knowledge systems that shape them: herding practices, seasonal movements, landscape reading and the social logics that underlie ephemeral architecture and discard (see Chang and Koster, Reference Chang and Koster1986; Brochier et al., Reference Brochier, Villa, Giacomarra and Tagliacozzo1992; Shahack-Gross et al., Reference Shahack-Gross, Marshall and Weiner2003; Biagetti, Reference Biagetti2014). This engagement produced more reflexive and plural forms of knowledge production, in which Indigenous and local expertise became essential analytical partners rather than external ethnographic contexts (Atalay, Reference Atalay2006; Rizvi, Reference Rizvi2015).

This reflexive turn also resonates with recent reflections on the future of ethnoarchaeology. Cunningham (Reference Cunningham, Tartaron and Kassabaumin press) argues that the critical potential of ethnoarchaeology lies in its capacity to expose archaeology’s own positionality – its entanglement with dominant discourses shaped by nationalism, imperialism, colonialism and androcentrism. By engaging with alternative and marginalized perspectives, ethnoarchaeology becomes a form of standpoint analysis that broadens interpretive baselines and enhances objectivity through plurality rather than detachment. Such critical reflection enables archaeologists to recognize how their own epistemic positions shape interpretation, challenging assumptions rooted in power structures. In doing so, ethnoarchaeology contributes to a more inclusive, reflexive and ultimately emancipatory discipline – one capable of generating narratives that are both scientifically rigorous and socially accountable (see also Biagetti, Reference Biagetti2024).

Second, for the interdisciplinary study of drylands, ethnoarchaeology offered a deep-time perspective on resilience, providing the tools to reposition these landscapes from the margins to the center of human history. Not differently than the reappraisal of rainfed agriculture mentioned at the beginning of this article, this point underscores the enduring relevance of the ethnoarchaeological approach: to see in the present, the complexity that makes the past intelligible. By reconnecting archaeology with lived experience and with other ways of knowing, ethnoarchaeology did not simply produce new answers – it expanded the field of who gets to ask the questions.

Open peer review

For open peer review materials, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/dry.2025.10011.

Acknowledgements

This study is funded by the European Union (ERC CoG, CAMP, 101088842). Views and opinions expressed are, however, those of the author only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Research Council. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them. The author is a member of CASEs, a Quality Research Group recognized by the Agencia de Gestión de Ayudas Universitarias y de Investigación (the Catalan Agency for Research) (AGAUR-SGR 212).

Competing interests

The authors declare none.

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Author comment: The long road: Ethnoarchaeology, pastoralism and the reconfiguration of archaeological knowledge — R0/PR1

Comments

Dear Editors of Drylands,

I am pleased to submit my manuscript entitled “The Long Road: Ethnoarchaeology, Pastoralism, and the Reconfiguration of Archaeological Knowledge” for consideration in Drylands.

This paper addresses the transformative role of ethnoarchaeology in advancing our understanding of pastoralism, particularly in dryland regions. Drawing on case studies and theoretical developments, it highlights how the ethnoarchaeological study of pastoral societies has reshaped archaeological thought, challenged Eurocentric narratives, and contributed to a re-evaluation of drylands—not as marginal, degraded spaces, but as dynamic landscapes of innovation and resilience.

Given the journal’s focus on interdisciplinary research in dryland environments, I believe this article will be of interest to your readership. It bridges archaeology, anthropology, and environmental studies, offering insights that are both historically grounded and relevant to contemporary debates on sustainability, land use, and Indigenous knowledge systems.

I confirm that the manuscript has not been published elsewhere and is not under consideration by any other journal. I have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Thank you for considering this submission. I look forward to the possibility of contributing to Drylands.

Sincerely,

Stefano Biagetti

Review: The long road: Ethnoarchaeology, pastoralism and the reconfiguration of archaeological knowledge — R0/PR2

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none.

Comments

This article proposes that ethnoarchaeological studies of pastoralism have had a significant role in changing scholarly attitudes towards pastoralist societies and that work in this tradition has been a key contributor to archaeological theory and the projects of decolonizing the discipline. This is an interesting and a provocative thesis, but, unfortunately, the article does not provide a strong argument or compelling evidence in support of this claim.

There are two key issues with the article. First, the authors miss the chance to place the particular genealogy of ethnoarchaeological studies that they are discussing within the larger context of transdisciplinary studies of pastoralism in the present and the past. Conspicuously absent in their intellectual history are the changes in how sociocultural anthropologists studied and understood contemporary pastoralists, as well as the revisionist historiography of pastoralist societies that has dramatically re-shaped the archaeology of pastoralism (e.g. Hjort 1982; Fratkin 1997; Galvin 2009; Kaufmann 2009; Sneath 2007; Henrichsen 2013; Potts 2014). The section reviewing this history is also problematically lacking in citations (pg. 6-8).

As a result, it isn’t clear what the authors think ethnoarchaeology uniquely brings to the table in terms of the ongoing and multi-sited process of re-thinking pastoralism over the last 40 years. It also means that the review misses the opportunity to contextualize how ethnoarchaeology interfaced with developments in other disciplines (ecology, environmental history, political ecology, development studies, etc.), which would better allow non-archaeologists to appreciate its importance.

Second, the article does not present any arguments or evidence in support of their major claims that: 1) ethnoarchaeology was the catalyst for theoretical transformations of the discipline of archaeology and 2) this work has contributed to decolonization of the discipline. One of the strongest sections of the article, because it discusses specific work in some detail, is the discussion of recent work in Section 3.2. However, this section does not provide data in support of, or successfully argue for, the major claims being made by the authors, namely that: “Ethnoarchaeology thus became more than a method: it became a theoretical stance. It enabled archaeologists to move beyond Western epistemological frameworks and engage seriously with Indigenous knowledge, oral histories, and non-Western ecological understandings.” (p. 12).

The authors also fail to engage at all with the wider literature on decolonization and the incorporation of Indigenous knowledge in archaeology (e.g. Atalay 2006; Rizvi 2015; Schneider and Hayes 2020; Cipolla et al. 2019; Watkins 2021; Kretzler and Gonzalez 2023), let alone in allied disciplines like ecology and anthropology. Challenging or critiquing traditional and Eurocentric ways of knowing is not, ipso facto, decolonization or a serious engagement with Indigenous science and philosophy. It is a valuable intellectual project (and one I’ve engaged in my own work) – but it must stand on its own terms and in its own context.

Works Cited:

Atalay, Sonya. 2006. “Indigenous Archaeology as Decolonizing Practice.” American Indian Quarterly 30 (3/4): 280–310.

Cipolla, Craig N., James Quinn, and Jay Levy. 2019. “Theory in Collaborative Indigenous Archaeology: Insights from Mohegan.” American Antiquity; Washington (Washington), ahead of print. http://dx.doi.org.ezproxy.cul.columbia.edu/10.1017/aaq.2018.69.

Fratkin, Elliot. 1997. “Pastoralism: Governance and Development Issues.” Annual Review of Anthropology 26 (1): 235–61. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.anthro.26.1.235.

Galvin, Kathleen A. 2009. “Transitions: Pastoralists Living with Change.” Annual Review of Anthropology 38 (1): 185–98. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-anthro-091908-164442.

Henrichsen, Dag. 2013. “Establishing a Precolonial ‘Modern’ Cattle-and-Gun Society: (Re-)Pastoralisation, Mercantile Capitalism and Power amongst Herero in Nineteenth-Century Central Namibia.” In Pastoralism in Africa, 1st ed., edited by Michael Bollig, Michael Schnegg, and Hans-Peter Wotzka. Past, Present and Future. Berghahn Books. JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt9qcrb7.12.

Hjort, Anders. 1982. “A CRITIQUE OF «ECOLOGICAL» MODELS OF PASTORAL LAND USE.” Nomadic Peoples, no. 10: 11–27.

Kaufmann, Jeffrey C. 2009. “THE SEDIMENT OF NOMADISM.” History in Africa 36: 235–64.

Kretzler, Ian, and Sara Gonzalez. 2023. “On Listening and Telling Anew: Possibilities for Archaeologies of Survivance.” American Anthropologist 125 (2): 310–21. https://doi.org/10.1111/aman.13838.

Potts, Daniel T. 2014. Nomadism in Iran: From Antiquity to the Modern Era. Oxford University Press.

Rizvi, Uzma Z. 2015. “Decolonizing Archaeology: On the Global Heritage of Epistemic Laziness.” In Two Days after Forever: A Reader on the Choreography of Time, edited by O. Kholeif. Sternberg Press.

Schneider, Tsim D., and Katherine Hayes. 2020. “Epistemic Colonialism: Is It Possible to Decolonize Archaeology?” American Indian Quarterly 44 (2): 127–48. https://doi.org/10.5250/amerindiquar.44.2.0127.

Sneath, David. 2007. The Headless State: Aristocratic Orders, Kinship Society, & Misrepresentations of Nomadic Inner Asia. Columbia University Press.

Watkins, Rachel J. 2021. “‘[This] System Was Not Made for [You]:’ A Case for Decolonial Scientia.” American Journal of Physical Anthropology 175 (2): 350–62. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.24199.

Recommendation: The long road: Ethnoarchaeology, pastoralism and the reconfiguration of archaeological knowledge — R0/PR3

Comments

Please see comments from reviewer and suggestions from Handling Editor.

Decision: The long road: Ethnoarchaeology, pastoralism and the reconfiguration of archaeological knowledge — R0/PR4

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No accompanying comment.

Author comment: The long road: Ethnoarchaeology, pastoralism and the reconfiguration of archaeological knowledge — R1/PR5

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Review: The long road: Ethnoarchaeology, pastoralism and the reconfiguration of archaeological knowledge — R1/PR6

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none.

Comments

I reviewed the previously submitted version of this article and I am pleased to see that the author has addressed many of the points raised in my review. Overall, I find the revised version much better – a clearer argument that is generally well-supported with adequate references to both recent work and foundational early studies.

The conclusion and the abstract need some further revision. In its current form, the abstract states the epistemological shift catalyzed by ethnoarchaeology “contributes to the greater inclusivity of archaeological thought.” This point is not actually developed or supported in the piece.

Furthermore, the authors make unsubstantiated claims in the conclusion about the contributions of the ethnoarchaeology of pastoralism to decolonial and indigenous archaeologies.

They write: “The challenge of materializing mobility pushed the discipline toward more reflexive and plural forms of knowledge production— ones that engage seriously with Indigenous and local knowledge as theoretical partners rather than ethnographic sources”

The authors do not provide any citations to support this claim. The work they cite by Cunningham is not quite that (according to their description). As I noted in my initial review, there is a difference between challenging or critiquing traditional and Eurocentric ways of knowing and decolonial theory/scholarship or a serious engagement with Indigenous science and philosophy.

Recommendation: The long road: Ethnoarchaeology, pastoralism and the reconfiguration of archaeological knowledge — R1/PR7

Comments

Dear Stefano

we now have a report back from the original reviewer, who is basically happy with the way that you have address the concerns. There remain a couple of issues to address. If you can deal with them in the next 2 weeks then I will be happy to recommend acceptance.

Best wishes David

Decision: The long road: Ethnoarchaeology, pastoralism and the reconfiguration of archaeological knowledge — R1/PR8

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Author comment: The long road: Ethnoarchaeology, pastoralism and the reconfiguration of archaeological knowledge — R2/PR9

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Recommendation: The long road: Ethnoarchaeology, pastoralism and the reconfiguration of archaeological knowledge — R2/PR10

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Decision: The long road: Ethnoarchaeology, pastoralism and the reconfiguration of archaeological knowledge — R2/PR11

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