Kalahari San foraging, land use, and territoriality: implications for the future

Type Journal Article - Before Farming
Title Kalahari San foraging, land use, and territoriality: implications for the future
Author(s)
Volume 3
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2007
Page numbers 1-14
URL http://online.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/abs/10.3828/bfarm.2007.3.3
Abstract
On December 13th, 2006, the San and Bakgalagadi of the Central Kalahari Game Reserve won an important legal
victory in the High Court of Botswana after a long and expensive legal case. The decisions of the three High Court
judges guaranteed that people who had been removed from their ancestral territories in the Central Kalahari
would be allowed the right of return, and they would be able to gather and hunt as long as they had subsistence
hunting licences. The attorney general of the Government of Botswana ruled that people returning to the reserve
would not be allowed access to services, including schools, health posts, and water facilities.
The question remains, will people who have been living settled lives and who have had livelihood supports
provided by government and non-governmental organisations be able to sustain themselves as foragers again in
the Central Kalahari? In order to evaluate this question, information on San mobility, land use, territoriality,
foraging, farming, and socioeconomic organisation were compiled. It is concluded that returning to a foraging
lifeway in the future will pose both challenges and opportunities. Efforts will need to be made to ensure that the
people returning to the Central Kalahari are able to draw upon scientific and cultural knowledge, traditions, and
practices from a wide range of sources and have water provided by the state if they are to be able to sustain
themselves over the long term.

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