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Wealth and pastoral dairy production: A case study from Maasailand

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Abstract

Much of pastoral development in Africa has been predicted on the assumed desirability of converting pastoralists to commercial beef producers. Such development has ignored two fundamental aspects of pastoral production: first, the greater human support capacity of a dual milk/meat production system, and second, significant wealth inequality within pastoral communities. This paper presents a case study based on several years of field research in Kenya Maasailand; it examines variations by wealth status in milking strategies and the level of milk offtake for human consumption. Rich households have five times the number of cattle per reference adult as poor households, but similar levels of milk consumption, due to differences in the allocation of milk between calves and people. Residential location and watering frequency also vary by wealth status, contributing to a difference in total milk production per cow.

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The research and the major part of the writing of this paper were done while the author was a scientist with the Kenya Country Program of the International Livestock Center for Africa. Finishing touches were done at the International Laboratory for Research on Animal Disseases. Neither organization bears responsibility for the content. I wish to thank P. N. deLeeuw for long and valuable discussions; the animal science aspects of the research also benefitted from discussions with K. Wagenaar and M. Nicholson. P. Lembuya was, as always, a faithful and demanding assistant. The useful comments of S. Sandford, T. Conelly, U. Herren, and J. Ensminger are also appreciated.

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Grandin, B.E. Wealth and pastoral dairy production: A case study from Maasailand. Hum Ecol 16, 1–21 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01262023

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