Settlement patterns and their potential implications for livelihoods among Maasai pastoralists in northern Tanzania

In the last century, many mobile pastoralists have transitioned to more sedentary lifestyles. Mobile people can be both pushed into a more settled existence by environmental or political forces, or pulled by new economic opportunities. While researchers have examined the causes and consequences of g...

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Main Author: Fox, David Nathan
Other Authors: Geography
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/77961
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-779612020-09-29T05:46:47Z Settlement patterns and their potential implications for livelihoods among Maasai pastoralists in northern Tanzania Fox, David Nathan Geography Baird, Timothy D. Prisley, Stephen P. Stern, Marc J. Tanzania Maasai pastoralism settlement livelihood diversification In the last century, many mobile pastoralists have transitioned to more sedentary lifestyles. Mobile people can be both pushed into a more settled existence by environmental or political forces, or pulled by new economic opportunities. While researchers have examined the causes and consequences of growing sedentarization, few contemporary studies have examined the patterns of settlement among mobile groups who are shifting to sedentary lifestyles and how these patterns may be related to socio-economic outcomes. This research examines settlement site selection by using GIS and remote sensing techniques to quantify settlement patterns in four Maasai villages in northern Tanzania, exploring the environmental and infrastructure correlates of settlement locations. A subset of these geographic variables is used with social survey data for 111 Maasai households in the study site to test the hypothesis that settlement location impacts livelihood strategies and economic outcomes by creating and constraining access to important resources and infrastructure. Landscape level evaluation of settlement pat-terns show that certain soil types limit occupation and the potential for agricultural expansion in 30% of the study area. Settlement density and existing agriculture are also clustered in certain parts of the landscape. The spatial models support the hypothesis that proximity to roads and village centers plays an important role in shaping overall settlement patterns. However, models that combine these factors with environmental and geophysical elements show improved explanatory performance, suggesting that competing factors are at play in influencing settlement patterns. Spatial models also indicate that agricultural development may be limiting land available for settlement in some parts of the study area. Results of the household level outcomes are more ambiguous, with few relationships between geographic variables and household livestock holdings, land under cultivation, annual income. Rather, these factors are influenced largely by demographic variables such as household size, age of the household head, and asset allocation. However, there appears to be less income diversity in households more distant from permanent water sources. Master of Science 2017-06-09T08:00:30Z 2017-06-09T08:00:30Z 2017-06-08 Thesis vt_gsexam:11887 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/77961 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Tanzania
Maasai
pastoralism
settlement
livelihood diversification
spellingShingle Tanzania
Maasai
pastoralism
settlement
livelihood diversification
Fox, David Nathan
Settlement patterns and their potential implications for livelihoods among Maasai pastoralists in northern Tanzania
description In the last century, many mobile pastoralists have transitioned to more sedentary lifestyles. Mobile people can be both pushed into a more settled existence by environmental or political forces, or pulled by new economic opportunities. While researchers have examined the causes and consequences of growing sedentarization, few contemporary studies have examined the patterns of settlement among mobile groups who are shifting to sedentary lifestyles and how these patterns may be related to socio-economic outcomes. This research examines settlement site selection by using GIS and remote sensing techniques to quantify settlement patterns in four Maasai villages in northern Tanzania, exploring the environmental and infrastructure correlates of settlement locations. A subset of these geographic variables is used with social survey data for 111 Maasai households in the study site to test the hypothesis that settlement location impacts livelihood strategies and economic outcomes by creating and constraining access to important resources and infrastructure. Landscape level evaluation of settlement pat-terns show that certain soil types limit occupation and the potential for agricultural expansion in 30% of the study area. Settlement density and existing agriculture are also clustered in certain parts of the landscape. The spatial models support the hypothesis that proximity to roads and village centers plays an important role in shaping overall settlement patterns. However, models that combine these factors with environmental and geophysical elements show improved explanatory performance, suggesting that competing factors are at play in influencing settlement patterns. Spatial models also indicate that agricultural development may be limiting land available for settlement in some parts of the study area. Results of the household level outcomes are more ambiguous, with few relationships between geographic variables and household livestock holdings, land under cultivation, annual income. Rather, these factors are influenced largely by demographic variables such as household size, age of the household head, and asset allocation. However, there appears to be less income diversity in households more distant from permanent water sources. === Master of Science
author2 Geography
author_facet Geography
Fox, David Nathan
author Fox, David Nathan
author_sort Fox, David Nathan
title Settlement patterns and their potential implications for livelihoods among Maasai pastoralists in northern Tanzania
title_short Settlement patterns and their potential implications for livelihoods among Maasai pastoralists in northern Tanzania
title_full Settlement patterns and their potential implications for livelihoods among Maasai pastoralists in northern Tanzania
title_fullStr Settlement patterns and their potential implications for livelihoods among Maasai pastoralists in northern Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Settlement patterns and their potential implications for livelihoods among Maasai pastoralists in northern Tanzania
title_sort settlement patterns and their potential implications for livelihoods among maasai pastoralists in northern tanzania
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/77961
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