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While pastoralism has long been featured in the livelihoods
of a number of ethnic groups in Uganda, it is increasingly
under pressure. Nowhere is this clearer than in Karamoja.
Policies implemented by successive regimes have left Karamoja
politically and culturally at the margins of a predominantly
sedentary “mainstream” Uganda.
The Karimojong - a pastoralist group in north eastern
Uganda - have, on the basis of decades of marginalisation and
a near cultural annihilation, responded in a manner that has
been interpreted by some etic viewers as an indication of
inherent violence, and by others as an intractable attempt to
retain a culture that is said to have been “overtaken” by the
times.
The Karimojong reaction could be interpreted in many other
ways, and their response to variables in their immediate
environment could be an indicator of bad or weak governance.
In addition, important parts of their ancestral lands have
been designated as national parks and game reserves, and they
were until very recently surrounded by various long-standing
conflicts, both within Uganda and across the border in
southern Sudan.
Responses to the “problems” of Karamoja have tended to
require the Karimojong to adapt to the mainstream, without
necessarily appreciating their justified protection concerns
(as would be suggested by a more rights-based approach) or the
specific needs of a pastoralist community. These responses
often come with the use of military force and attempt to
encourage sedentary livelihoods, without a clear understanding
of how these approaches reproduce violence or further
contribute to a national governance deficit.
This component of the Beyond Juba project, using
the case of Karamoja as its entry point, will explore the
multiple ways in which the tensions between pastoralist and
sedentary livelihoods are being played out in Uganda, and the
extent to which this should be factored into our thinking
about transitional justice processes. The root cause of the
northern Uganda conflict is entwined with a history of
divisive national politics. The dynamics were kept going by
the use of armed force. Could it be that the apparent state of
anarchy in Karamoja has a root cause similar to the national
political dynamic? Are there similarities between the approach
to northern Uganda and that taken in the Karamoja sub-region?
Why has violence persisted in this sub-region, and what are
the implications for gender identities, the psychological
state of the population, traditional institutions and
decentralisation?
We shall attempt to assess how these transitional issues
embedded in Karamoja relate to the regional and national
processes, and will consider how interventions in Karamoja and
other areas with pastoralist groups could deal with such
issues.
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