Michael Bollig is Professor of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Cologne where his key interests lie in the environmental anthropology of sub-Saharan Africa. His current research projects focus on the social-ecological dynamics connected to large-scale conservation projects, the commodification of nature and the political ecology of pastoralism. He is the author of Risk Management in a Hazardous Environment (2006), co-author of African Landscapes (2009) with O. Bubenzer, Pastoralism in Africa (2013) with M. Schnegg and H.P. Wotzka, and Resilience and Collapse in African Savannahs (2017) with D. Anderson.
I. Introduction; 1. Doing research on a changing savannah landscape; II.
The evolution of pre-colonial environmental infrastructures; 2. The
prehistory of North-western Namibia and the riddled emergence of
pastoralism; 3. Elephants and humans in the late 19th and early 20th
century; III. Encapsulation and pastoralisation, 1900s to 1940s; 4.
Scientist, cartographers, photographers and the establishment of western
knowledge of the Kaokofeld; 5. The establishment of colonial administration
and the re-immigration of pastoralists into the Kaokoveld - 1900s to 1920s;
6. The politics of encapsulation: game protection, instituting borders and
controlling mobility; IV. The state, intervention, and local appropriations
between 1950s and 1980s; 7. A hydrological revolution in an African
savannah; 8.Conservation and poaching in the 1970s and 1980s; V. Dynamics
of social-ecological relations between the 1990s and the present; 9:
Pastoralism, environmental infrastructures and state-local society
relations in the late 20th and early 21st century; 10. The establishment of
"new commons" by government decree; 11. Into the future - envisioning,
planning and negotiating environmental infrastructures; VI. Theorizing
time, space, and change in a pastoral system; 12. The changing
environmental infrastructure of the north-western Namibian savannah