Across sub-Saharan Africa pastoralists live alongside large densities and distributions of wildlife.
Today, the relationships between pastoralists and spaces dedicated to wildlife are changing.
Pastoralists are losing communal land due to changes in land tenure and an increase in wildlifebased
tourism. This has led to shifts in land access and use, as well as in the political economy of
labor for livestock production. The objective of this research is to understand how new land
tenure arrangements and shifts in the tourism economy are affecting access to grazing resources
and restructuring herd management. This case study from southwest Kenya employs qualitative
methods including semi-structured interviews, informal conversations, and ethnographic
observations gathered from accompanying individuals on their daily routines. In the first chapter,
I argue that there are both positive and negative effects to the shifts in land tenure with respect to
livestock production strategies for pastoralists who reside on the borders of protected areas.
Some of the effects explored in this chapter include changes in social capital, increased fences,
and private wildlife conservancies. The second chapter answers the question of how Maasai
women’s identities have changed to become livestock managers. I explore how women are
engendered, occasionally by default, to care for cattle herds and hired herders, and in
successfully doing so, they gain trust in themselves and from their male family members as
capable and competent contributors to their families’ predominant livelihood. This research
seeks to provide a comprehensive understanding of how changes on these shared landscapes are
affecting relationships within pastoralist societies; it is also an effort to produce useful studies on
women in marginalized and underrepresented societies in order to provide place-based and
societally appropriate explanations of and recommendations for increasing women’s roles and
responsibilities towards a goal of gender equality.Master of ScienceNatural Resources and EnvironmentUniversity of Michiganhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136598/1/Poelking_Claire_TheNewShepherd.pd