Published May 20, 2024 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Rangelands and Pastoralism in Globalized Economies: Policy Paralysis and Legal Requisites

  • 1. The Grassroots Institute, 548 Jean Talon Ouest, Montreal, QC, H3N 1R5 Canada E-mail: ceo@grassrootsinstitute.ca, harjjumend@gmail.com

Description

Growing quest for globalization and expanding economies have resulted into fragmentation, enclosure, grabbing, militarization and devastation of rangelands. Grasslands – covering 70% of the global agricultural area – are the basis for livestock production. In most of the countries, governments have little recognition of communal tenures of agro-pastoralists. Consequently, both pastoralists and rangeland ecosystems have suffered a grim fate. On the contrary, the subsistence pastoralism is an established sustainable strategy of livelihood and ecosystem conservation in the rangelands. Unfortunately, some of the most nutritive foods and other sustainable products of nomadic pastoralists have not desirably been priced in modern markets. With the demonstrated cases exhibiting the nomadic pastoralists, such as Hutsul shepherd communities of Ukraine, as most sustainable societies on planet Earth, there is urgent need for reshaping the popular paradigm and State policies on rangeland commons. In isolation of pastoralist people, the rangelands cannot truly be conserved or protected. To begin with, the resilience of pastoralists to the changing environments and their (unique) rangeland management can first be pondered. Accordingly, the policy and legal frameworks of States need to be reoriented and revised. In particular, Eurasian countries should review their laws and policies on rangeland sustainability and pastoral grazing.

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Identifiers

Dates

Accepted
2024-05-20
Published

References

  • Pastoralists; Rangelands; Enclosure; Hutsul; Grasslands; Inequity; Mobility; Fragmentation