Governing violence in the pastoralist space: Karrayu and state notions of cattle raiding in the Ethiopian Awash Valley
Author(s) -
Alemmaya Mulugeta,
Tobias Hagmann
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
avrug-bulletin/afrika focus
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 0772-084X
pISSN - 0772-0793
DOI - 10.21825/af.v21i2.5048
Subject(s) - pastoralism , peacemaking , legitimacy , state (computer science) , government (linguistics) , corporate governance , political science , ethnic group , ethnic conflict , geography , political economy , sociology , livestock , politics , law , economics , linguistics , philosophy , finance , algorithm , computer science , forestry
Based on recent fieldwork this article examines how cattle raids involving Karrayu pastoralists are governed by the local administration and customary authorities in Ethiopia’s Upper and Middle Awash Valley. It argues that the regulation of violent conflicts in areas marked by weak state presence and legitimacy must be understood as a function of multiple social orders, actors and norms. The authors draw attention to the evolving rationales of inter-ethnic cattle raids, highlight the incomplete nature of state expansion into the Karrayu pastoralist space, and scrutinize the ambiguities of government and community peacemaking.
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