Abstract
Prior to 1996 and the Congolese wars, exploitative land policies pushed farmers in the eastern highlands of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) into a vulnerable position, with cattle manure sustaining intensive cultivation. This exposed households to a complete breakdown in mixed farming as cattle became targets of war. This study of villages in South Kivu offers an inside understanding of continuity and change in farming practices in a region where there are no easy solutions, and it assesses how the province lost its present and where farmers look when they glance to the future. For farmers, who hold a broad view of soil fertility, the casualties of war were not only people and cattle but also the land itself, which has enduring scars. Perceiving a rupture in tradition, South Kivu farmers are searching desperately for new livelihoods that are built on education instead of livestock, setting aside old ethnic signifiers to seek a future beyond protracted conflict. © 2012 The Author(s). Disasters © Overseas Development Institute, 2012.
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Cox, T. P. (2012). Farming the battlefield: The meanings of war, cattle and soil in South Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo. Disasters, 36(2), 233–248. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-7717.2011.01257.x
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