Policy-driven inter-ethnic conflicts in Southern Ethiopia
Policy-driven inter-ethnic conflicts in Southern Ethiopia
Persistent inter-ethnic conflicts in southern Ethiopia have created a crisis in security of customary land tenure in the grazing lands. This article explores the links between government administrative policies and inter-ethnic conflicts on grazing resource borders by discussing the historical relationships between contesting pastoral groups, their perceptions of resource borders and how the groups used government policies of ethnic-based decentralisation and referendum to claim ownership rights to grazing lands. The article contextualises the discussions within the politics of land use. Inter-ethnic conflicts have interfered with customary resource allocations by undermining customary institutions for resource sharing. There is a need for urgent dialogue between the government and different pastoral communities for negotiating access to key resources supported by conflict resolution in the southern rangelands of Ethiopia.
CITATION: Tache, Boku; Oba, Gufu. Policy-driven inter-ethnic conflicts in Southern Ethiopia . Essex : Taylor & Francis , . Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 36, No. 121 Sept. 2009, pp. 409-426 - Available at: https://library.au.int/policy-driven-inter-ethnic-conflicts-southern-ethiopia-3