International Journal For Multidisciplinary Research
E-ISSN: 2582-2160
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Volume 8 Issue 2
March-April 2026
Indexing Partners
Pastoralism, Agricultural Modernisation, and Rural Transformation: Lessons from Nigeria’s Middle Belt and India’s North-Western States
| Author(s) | Ms. Ruchi Negi |
|---|---|
| Country | India |
| Abstract | Pastoralism and settled agriculture have historically coexisted across much of the Global South, yet their relationship has grown increasingly fraught under conditions of demographic pressure, climatic stress, and state-led agricultural modernisation. In Nigeria’s Middle Belt, notably Benue, Taraba, and Plateau states, farmer–herder conflicts have intensified, displacing hundreds of thousands of people and eroding indigenous institutions that once mediated access to land and seasonal grazing. In contrast, India’s north-western states of Punjab and Haryana represent a paradigmatic case of state-driven agrarian transformation, where Green Revolution technologies enabled remarkable gains in cereal production and national food security but generated severe ecological stresses, particularly groundwater depletion and soil degradation. This paper offers a comparative analysis of these two trajectories, arguing that the Punjab–Haryana experience contains both opportunities and cautions for debates on rural transformation in Nigeria’s Middle Belt. It draws on literatures on pastoralism, agrarian political economy, environmental security, and conflict transformation, as well as policy debates on livestock reform and sustainable agriculture in Nigeria and India. Building on this corpus and the emerging India–Africa cooperation agenda, the paper contends that elements of agricultural modernisation-such as improved irrigation, crop diversification, and rural market integration-can support food security and economic stability in the Middle Belt, but only if pursued in ways that protect pastoral mobility, respect customary land rights, and minimise ecological externalities. Rather than viewing pastoralism as an anachronistic obstacle to development, the analysis foregrounds its adaptive strengths and proposes pathways for integrating indigenous land-use practices with context-sensitive modernisation. The paper concludes that a genuinely inclusive rural transformation requires reimagining state policy away from sedentarisation and high-external-input agriculture toward negotiated, multi-scalar governance of land, water, and mobility. |
| Keywords | Farmer–Herder Conflict, Pastoralism, Agrarian Transformation, Environmental Security, Land Governance |
| Field | Sociology > Administration / Law / Management |
| Published In | Volume 8, Issue 1, January-February 2026 |
| Published On | 2026-01-18 |
| DOI | https://doi.org/10.36948/ijfmr.2026.v08i01.70250 |
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E-ISSN 2582-2160
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IJFMR DOI prefix is
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