Capitalizing Contradictoriness: Ranchers between State and Open Range – and vis-à-vis Pastoralists

2023-08-29 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Capitalizing Contradictoriness: Ranchers between State and Open Range – and vis-à-vis Pastoralists​
Schareika, N. ​ (2023) 
Pastoralism13(1) art. 22​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13570-023-00285-5 

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Authors
Schareika, Nikolaus 
Abstract
Abstract The article explores and discusses findings from historical, geographical and anthropological research arguing that not simply a capitalist outlook but a footing in the state was crucial to the emergence and development of ranching. It develops the proposition that during a frontier phase, ranching evolved as a social, economic and ecological system of livestock keeping that was predicated on and exploited a duality of structures with the confining state on one side and the open range on the other, both separated and connected by a frontier. This is what makes ranching historically different from pastoralism despite superficial similarities. As pastoralism is increasingly connected to markets, capitalism and society at large, developing properties typically known from ranching, the article makes a case for taking a closer look at historical ranching in order to study transforming pastoral societies of the presence.
Issue Date
29-August-2023
Journal
Pastoralism 
Language
English
Sponsor
Open-Access-Publikationsfonds 2023

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