MYNA team members presented preliminary findings at the 2024 conference of the Political Ecology Network. Hosted by the University of Dodoma, in Tanzania, the POLLEN 2024 Conference also happened simultaneously in Lima, Peru, and Lund, Sweden on June 10-12, 2024.
Joana, Stanley ole Neboo and Richard ole Supeet presented their paper Pastoralism and Pentecostalism: Disentangling the religious dimension of changing land tenure/use dynamics in southern Kenya; and Angela and Lenaai presented Land, culture and religion: change and transformation among the Loita Maasai in Kenya.
MYNA co-researchers and long-time friends of Joana’s and Angela’s, Stanley, Lenaai and Richard traveled by bus from their respective homes in the Maasai Mara and Loita hills (Narok County) and Loitokito (Kajiado County) in Kenya all the way to Dodoma (Central Tanzania) to participate in the Religion and Religious Knowledge in Conservation and Development: Past, Present and Future panel convened by Peter Rowe (U. of Edinburgh). Stanley, Lenaai and Richard actively contributed to the debate by answering questions from the audience and sharing their own perspectives on the findings in a panel that elicited a lot of interest from the audience.
The team, together with Joana’s 7-years old son Luís and a small group of conference participants, then traveled to Yaeda near Lake Eyasi to visit an extensive woodland area held by Hadzabe hunter-gatherers, and camped there for a night.
The trip in Tanzania was followed by one month of fieldwork in Kenya in Loita (Lenaai and Angela) and Amboseli (Richard and Joana).