Effects of Land Subdivision on Sustainable Livestock Production in Mbirikani Ward, Kajiado County, Kenya.
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Date
2023Author
Nanyamal, Wilson T
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Rural impoverished people around the world rely largely on cattle for their livelihood, which also
makes up around 25% of all agricultural trade worldwide. Most studies on the topic have
concentrated on land subdivision in the context of crop farming agriculture hence livestock
continue to receive little attention. In the few available studies on the subject, none of the studies
have been localized to take in account of the unique challenges facing the country. Kajiado County
being a peri-urban pastoral county presents a unique problem which academic intervention and
urgent solutions. Thus, there exists a need to examine how sustainable livestock production is
affected by land subdivision in the context of Kenyan pastoral lands. This study, therefore,
hypothesised that land subdivision has a negative significant effect on sustainable livestock
production in Mbirikani Ward in Kajiado County, Kenya. The study set out to meet four specific
objectives using a descriptive survey methodology utilizing the mixed strategy approach.
Collection and evaluation of data included qualitative as well as quantitative techniques. The study
administered semi-structured questionnaires to 56 and conducted one semi-structured key
informant interview. The study established the need for individual land ownership, urban
development, and land use change to other competing uses as the main driving factors of land
subdivision in Mbirikani. Further, the research determined that diminishing land sizes because of
land subdivision led to inter alia decline of the general amount of animals per household,
decreasing sales in livestock and livestock-related goods and services, poor pasture management,
land, and environmental degradation, and poor livestock marketing structures. In addition, these
study findings indicated that residents coped with land subdivision by diversifying income sources,
changing to other land uses and increasing the stocking density among other ways. However, to
redress the problem the study recommended among others the creation of a land use and physical
development plan with a local zoning standard providing minimum land holding, stocking rate and
land use zoning, as well as a land consolidation plan for the subdivided plots which are
economically unviable and marketing structure. The results feel the theoretical gap of
contextualizing of the implication of land subdivision to sustainable livestock production.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Subject
Effects of Land SubdivisionRights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
- Faculty of Arts [979]
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