Nightingale, Andrea
- Department of Urban and Rural Development, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
- University of Oslo (UiO)
Research article2025Peer reviewed
Naess, Lars Otto; Wangari-Muneri, Eunice; Nightingale, Andrea J.; Mehta, Lyla
This paper employs a feminist political ecology (FPE) framing to show how adaptation processes result in shifting intersectional subjectivities that reshape peoples' relationships to resources and communities. Drawing on cases of pastoralists affected by conservation efforts in Kenya and India, we argue that these shifts create marginalisation while also offering possibilities to challenge existing, gendered subjectivities. We show how maladaptive outcomes result from systemic and deliberate processes, exemplified through loss of land access and control, knowledge politics, and changes in social relations. Using FPE illustrates how top-down adaptation becomes maladaptive and fails, but also offers opportunities to counter marginalisation.
Climate change; intersectionality; subjectivities; pastoralists; adaptation; maladaptation
The Journal of Peasant Studies
2025
Publisher: ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR AND FRANCIS LTD
Gender Studies
Social Anthropology
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/141132