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Reign over me? Social-economic autonomy claims over land rights by Tanzania's Maasai

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dc.creator Makulilo, Alexander B.
dc.date 2020-03-19T09:53:40Z
dc.date 2020-03-19T09:53:40Z
dc.date 2019
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-20T13:09:15Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-20T13:09:15Z
dc.identifier Makulilo, A. B. (2019). Reign over me? Social-economic autonomy claims over land rights by Tanzania's Maasai. Journal on Ethnopolitics & Minority Issues in Europe, 18(2), 24-42.
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12661/2207
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12661/2207
dc.description Abstract. Full text is available at: https://heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?handle=hein.journals/jemie2019&div=10&id=&page=
dc.description Maasai are very famous for their profound practice of indigenous customs and traditions. Their social and economic activities largely depend on land. However, the colonial state -- and later the post-independent state -- actively initiated programmes to grab their land for tourism and farming. Ever since, the Maasai have placed the issue of land as central to the struggle for cultural and economic autonomy. The state, on the contrary, has taken an integration and assimilation approach to the Maasai. Yet, the advance of neo-liberal and market-oriented policies increasingly threaten the Maasai's practice of their indigenous life. This article, through the lens of Non-Territorial Autonomy, revisits the Maasai claims for land rights which thus inform their claims for cultural and economic autonomy. It notes that, legally, human rights protections cover constitutional rights and remedies in relation to pastoral livelihoods. However, as members of a minority community, such coverage is not adequate. The law takes all people as essentially belonging to a specific geographical space with a static authority over them.
dc.language en
dc.publisher ECMI
dc.subject Maasai
dc.subject Land right
dc.subject Indigenous customs
dc.subject Indigenous traditions
dc.subject Colonial state
dc.subject Post-independent state
dc.subject Tourism
dc.subject Farming
dc.subject Economic autonomy
dc.subject Human rights
dc.subject Pastoral livelihoods
dc.title Reign over me? Social-economic autonomy claims over land rights by Tanzania's Maasai
dc.type Article


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