Book

The farming herders: irrigation, reciprocity and marriage among the Turkana pastoralists of north-western Kenya

University Microfilms InternationalAnn Arbor, Michigan • Published In 1988 • Pages:

By: Njeru, Enos Hudson Nthia.

Abstract
This source is a study of value and social adjustments related to marriage and reciprocity among Turkana pastoralists who have recently adopted irrigation agriculture and a settled way of life. The Turkana who are the subjects of this study were forced out of the pastoral economy by the loss of their herds as a result of drought, livestock diseases, and livestock theft and subsequently became participants in the Katilu Irrigation Project established by the government of Kenya. Among other developments, the author finds that devaluation of women, increased polygyny, family instability, and concubinage have resulted from the shift to the settled farming way of life
Subjects
Theoretical orientation in research and its results
Public welfare
Basis of marriage
Mode of marriage
Termination of marriage
Sex and marital offenses
Kin relationships
Sociocultural trends
Social relationships and groups
Pastoral activities
culture
Turkana
HRAF PubDate
2019
Region
Africa
Sub Region
Eastern Africa
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Gerald Reid ; 1989
Field Date
1979-1983
Coverage Place
Katilu in Turkana District, Kenya
Notes
Enos Hudson Nthia Njeru
UM 8500014
Includes bibliographical references (p. 165-173)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Santa Barbara, 1984
LCSH
Turkana (African people)