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  • Resilience and Collapse in African Savannahs eds. by David M. Anderson and Michael Bollig
  • Richard D. Waller
David M. Anderson and Michael Bollig, eds. Resilience and Collapse in African Savannahs. Abingdon: Routledge, 2017. x + 232 pp. $155.00. Cloth. ISBN: 978-1-138-28877-5.

David M. Anderson and Michael Bollig's edited volume Resilience and Collapse in African Savannahs makes more widely accessible an important collection of articles first published in the Journal of Eastern African Studies. Although the chapters look at change, adaptation, and resilience in one particular geographic area, the range of disciplinary perspectives involved here and their framing within a cyclical model of challenge and response, encompassing both human communities and natural ecosystems and drawing on a large body of social and natural science research, give the book as a whole a much wider significance. The editors' introduction is especially helpful in bringing the chapters together and providing the reader with a working context.

The study area itself is well-suited to collaborative interdisciplinary inquiry. Baringo is a bounded area of lake flats flanked by steep escarpments south of Lake Turkana in Kenya's northern Rift Valley. It includes different but complementary ecological niches, supporting livestock grazing, both rain-fed and intensive irrigation agriculture, and foraging, and is occupied by several small communities who viewed Baringo as a place of refuge and opportunity. The area has generated a rich and varied body of data ranging from colonial studies of erosion and over-stocking to more recent work on development, agricultural change, inter-communal violence, and local politics.

The adaptive cycle model is set out in the chapter by Bollig, which looks at how the Pokot "became a people" and moved into and now (it appears) out of intensive subsistence pastoralism after a catastrophic and prolonged drought in the early nineteenth century. This regional drought, discussed [End Page 246] by Anderson in the following chapter, erased both communities and their subsistence resources and thus acts as a historical baseline for the present study. The cycle moves through four stages, beginning with recovery (from collapse), moving through stages of exploitation (of new opportunities and resources) and conservation, when the community developed the structures and ideology necessary to maintain and defend its mode of exploitation, and ending with "release" at the point where the system has locked up, can no longer adapt to maintain itself, and begins to collapse, thus "releasing" a new cycle of renewal, innovation, and reconfiguration. Bollig and other contributors argue that that point in the cycle has now been reached.

This chronological scheme works well enough for Baringo, but, as Bollig himself points out, it cannot be transferred and applied mechanically elsewhere. It is to be understood as a complex system of interacting variables operating at different levels or registers. The mix will thus vary from case to case. Moreover, the model is processual rather than predictive, and the flow may not be unidirectional. External interventions, including serious drought or disease and high levels of violence, which, as several of the studies indicate, can have serious nutritional as well as environmental effects, may create "cross-currents" and "back eddies."

The real heuristic value of this approach perhaps lies in the breadth and flexibility it accords to the concept of resilience as the basis for adaptation and survival and in the long time-scale it offers. Looking at the deep history of irrigation agricultural systems in Marakwet and Pokot, Davies and Moore find continuity and stability over time, based on "cultural resilience," but also innovation. Following this, Greiner and Mwaka argue that the expansion of commercial honey collection in East Pokot should be understood as an intensification of labor rather than a diversification of production. The last two chapters in the book, by Little and Lynch, extend resilience into the modern political field, through studies of ethnic mobilization to defend resources, in one case (Il Chamus) through entry into the electoral process and in the other (Sangwer) via the use of indigeneity as a vehicle for making land claims. Finally, Straight and her co-authors (chapter 9) move from making claims (to land) to making meaning (from landscape). In the only paper focused outside...

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