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1. Pastoralists & Agriculturalists in Africa
4. Pastoralists Specialized adaptation to environments that cannot support a human population through agriculture (hilly terrain, dry climate, or unsuitable soil) but produces grass (which humans cannot eat).
Six most popular species around the world: sheep, goats, cattle, horses, donkeys, and camels
Main source of food is meat and milk; grains and manufactured items are traded
5. Pastoralism Key to pastoralist economy is herd growth
Animals are the form of wealth
Risky because of drought, disease, theft
Pastoralists need to know the carrying capacity of the land as well as how many animals needed to support a family Maasai donating cows to the US after 9/11
6. Pastoralists Pastoralist societies tend to be based on patrilineal kinship.
Why do you think this is?
7. Horticulturalists Production of domesticated plants using handheld tools
Rain as the source of moisture
Major crops: yams, corns, beans, grains such as millet and sorghum, and root crops
Cultivated fields not used permanently, year after year, but remain fallow
8. Horticulturalists Lower yield per acre than intensive agriculture but less human labor also
Average plot size are less than an acre; 2.5 acres can support 5-8 people a year.
Population densities are low, but villages may be large (100-1,000 people)
9. Slash-and-Burn Farming A field is cleared by felling the trees and burning the brush
The burned vegetation is left on the land, preventing drying out of the soil
Ash serves as fertilizer
Very little weeding required because of the ash cover
Fields used for a few years and then allowed to lie fallow (up to 20 years) so that the forest cover can be rebuilt and soil fertility restored
10. Horticulture and the Environment So long as the land is allowed to remain fallow until it rejuvenates, the system is sustainable.
However, access to land by ranchers, miners, tourists, and farmers; horticulturalists desire to increase production for cash; and population growth can mean that the land becomes degraded.
11. Agriculturalists & Gender Mens and womens work roles often clearly defined
A common pattern is for women to grow staple crops and men to grow the prestige crops
The differences in work roles have implications for the status of men and women.
12. Agriculturalists & Gender With an increase in crops grown for sale (cash crops like cotton, cocoa, etc) rather than crops grown for household use (staples or food crops), men tend to dominate in farming
The introduction of the market economy has thus tended to benefit men, not women.
13. Agriculturalists Associated with the rise of:
sedentary villages
cities and the state
occupational diversity
social stratification Downtown Yaounde, Cameroon
14. Agriculturalists Surplus food production goes to non-food-producing occupational specialists, such as those in religious or ruling elites
Importance of credit and debt (money-lenders)
15. Characteristics of Agriculturalists Importance of household in production: children work harder in farming communities than in any other mode of production
Use of a supplementary labor supply outside of household
Need of farmers to depend on part-time non-farming work to supplement income
Surplus extracted from the state in the form of rents, taxes, and free labor
16. The State and Agriculture The state is heavily involved in agriculture:
Sets price at which farm products are sold
Subsidizes farmers and farm inputs (fertilizer, pesticides)
Markets farm products overseas and imports other products that affect local farm products
17. The State and Agriculture Sets land ownership policy and rules regarding land tenancy
Affects labor markets by controlling migration from outside the country, which creates large pools of migrant labor
Also allows surplus rural labor to migrate and benefits from remittances sent home