Between Cash Cows and Golden Calves: Adaptations of Mongolian Pastoralism in the 'Age of the Market'
Author: Marin, Andrei
Source: Nomadic Peoples, Volume 12, Number 2, December 2008 , pp. 75-101(27)
Abstract:
Pastoralism in Mongolia has increasingly been portrayed by two powerful and mutually reinforcing discourses. First, the neo-liberal discourse enthusiastically embraced and reproduced by most of the Mongolian political elite constructs pastoralism as backward and unproductive, in need of modernization, and sedentarization. Second, an increasingly powerful essentialist discourse argues for the preservation of 'traditional' Mongolian pastoralism. By presenting a stereotypical image of 'the nomadic culture' on the brink of extinction, outsiders (e.g. NGOs, the tourist industry) become stakeholders in the debate on Mongolian identity and the country's development path. They also help (unwillingly perhaps) reinforce the image of the pastoralist as obsolete and 'timeless'. The article shows that the realities of Mongolian pastoralists lie beyond these two constructs. The pastoralists have taken steps toward adapting to the new socio-economic realities: they use veterinary services, try to use the market system and social services. Yet their adaptive capacity is severely limited by unfavourable social and economic circumstance endorsed by the State.Keywords: MONGOLIA; PASTORALISM; ADAPTATION; NEO-LIBERALISM; SEDENTARIZATION
DOI: 10.3167/np.2008.120206
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