essay

Settled Turkana

turkana herders of the dry savanna : ecology and biobehavioral response of nomads to an uncertain environmentOxford • Published In 1999 • Pages: 332-352

By: Campbell, Benjamin C., Leslie, Paul W., Little, Michael A., Brainard, Jean M.(Jean Mabel), DeLuca, Michael A..

Abstract
This article discusses the effects of settlement on nomadic pastoralist Turkana. It shows that settling nomadic pastoralists has both negative and positive consequences. The former includes a less balanced diet, less physical activity or exercise, loss of social integration and identity, congested living, and increased infection. Changes that may contribute improvements over the nomadic way of life include better hygiene, a more balanced diet, improved access to health care and education.
Subjects
Settlement patterns
Research and development
Pastoral activities
Annual cycle
Land use
Tillage
Cereal agriculture
Community structure
Childbirth
Infant feeding
Mortality
Birth statistics
Public health and sanitation
Diet
Education system
culture
Turkana
HRAF PubDate
2010
Region
Africa
Sub Region
Eastern Africa
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Types
Biologist
Anthropologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Teferi Abate Adem; 2009
Field Date
1980-1996
Coverage Date
1980-1999
Coverage Place
Turkana, Kenya
Notes
Benjamin C. Campbell, Paul W. Leslie, Michael A, Little, Jean M. Brainard, and Michael A. DeLuca
For bibliographical references see document 24: Little and Leslie
LCCN
99219983
LCSH
Turkana (African people)