Rahma Hassan, CASAS’ member, and colleagues have just published a new article in Nomadic People. Their article examines the process of securing land rights for pastoralists in Kenya, applying the concept of sedentism to understand the impact of two recent changes in Kenyan land governance. Drawing on fieldwork among pastoralists living in Samburu County in…
Category: CASAS’ members publications
Papers, books, book chapters and reports published by CASAS’ members
Al-ʿUcha: A Women Farmworkers’ Strategy for Gendering Workers’ Rights in Southern Morocco
New publication alert! Fayrouz Yousfi, CASAS’ member, has published a new article in Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies, called “Al-ʿUcha: A Women Farmworkers’ Strategy for Gendering Workers’ Rights in Southern Morocco”. In this paper, she examines how women agricultural workers mobilize for their right to fair, and fairly compensated, work. Check this article: https://read.dukeupress.edu/jmews/article-abstract/19/1/112/343820/Al-UchaA-Women-Farmworkers-Strategy-for-Gendering
A–Z of cost-effective adaptation strategies to the impact of climate change among crop farmers in West Africa
Check out this new article by NwaJesus Anthony Onyekuru, Robert Marchant, Julia M Touza, Chukwuma Ume (CASAS member), Chinedu Chiemela, Chukwemeka Onyia, Eric C Eboh, Christopher C Eze Agriculture is extremely vulnerable to climate change. Changes in precipitation and temperature patterns will result in long-term declines in production and short-term crop failures. These short- and…
School food at home: Brazil’s national school food programme (PNAE) during the COVID-19 pandemic
Check out this new article by Ricardo Barbosa Jr, Estevan Coca (CASAS member), and Gabriel Soyer. School closures during the COVID-19 pandemic have hindered students’ food access, particularly low-income students who rely on schools for their primary daily meals. School food programmes have adapted to pandemic conditions by providing school food at home (SF@H). We…
Identity and Organization Processes, and Experiences of Persistence of Fairs and Markets in the Argentinean Patagonia
Check out this new article by Mercedes Ejarque (CASAS member), María Guadalupe Lamisón and María Virginia Nessi. To face increasingly exclusive development models, collective and self-managing forms of production, work and access to food have appeared. In this article, we seek to understand how identity and organizational processes contribute to the persistence of these experiences…





