Abstract
Pastoral populations of East Africa confront multiple risks associated with drought, food shortages and insecurity. In this arid region, drought is a 'normal' event and herders pursue strategies of mobility, livestock loaning and diversification to combat its effects. What is not a norm are prolonged floods when precipitation cycles become inverted and dry season rainfall greatly exceeds the average amount for a year. This article examines the events and responses to 'El Niño' in the rangeland areas of northern Kenya and southern Somalia during 1997/98. It suggests that these global climatic episodes need to be assessed against local factors and processes, which strongly shape their impacts on human populations.
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Little, P. D., Mahmoud, H., & Coppock, D. L. (2001). When deserts flood: Risk management and climatic processes among East African pastoralists. Climate Research, 19(2), 149–159. https://doi.org/10.3354/cr019149
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