Beyond Displacement: How Tanzania’s SGR Is Reshaping Maasai Pastoral Life

In this article, Makulangwa Jeremiah Chambo (Mzumbe University) and Lucy Willy Massoi (Project B03 “Violent Futures”) examine how the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) in Tanzania has reshaped livelihoods and governance among the Ilparakuyo Maasai in Kilosa District. They find that rather than displacing pastoralists, the railway has prompted adaptive changes—such as new trading opportunities and diversified incomes—while largely reinforcing pastoral livelihoods and producing hybrid socio-spatial arrangements.



Pastoralism Reorganised: Maasai Resilience and Governance in the Shadow of Mega-Infrastructure in Tanzania

By Makulangwa Jeremiah Chambo and Lucy Willy Massoi

Abstract
Mega-infrastructure projects are widely promoted as engines of modernisation in Africa, yet their implications for pastoralist societies remain contested. This article examines how Tanzania’s Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) has reshaped livelihoods, governance, and spatial practices among the Ilparakuyo Maasai in Kilosa District. Using interviews, focus group discussions, and field observations, the study draws on Lefebvre’s notion of the production of space and resilience theory to analyze community responses. The findings show that the SGR has not displaced pastoralists but reorganised their practices through adaptation rather than transformation. Stations and adjacent settlements became economic hubs appropriated by women traders and youth entrepreneurs, with profits often reinvested in livestock, reinforcing pastoral continuity. Resilience emerged through livelihood diversification, though unevenly distributed across households. Governance appeared as a contested arena, where elders mediated disputes, women pressed for inclusion, and state regulations reshaped authority. The study argues that the SGR generates hybrid socio-spatial realities in which pastoralists assert agency, reorganise livelihoods, and renegotiate authority. By moving beyond binary narratives of disruption versus modernisation, it extends debates on infrastructure, resilience, and governance in African rangelands.



Reference

Chambo, M. J., Massoi, L. W. 2026. Pastoralism reorganised: Maasai resilience and governance in the shadow of mega-infrastructure in Tanzania. Cogent Social Sciences, 12(1). DOI

More CRC News

cover for a web post

Ghost Projects – Ruined Futures and the Unfulfilled Promises of Infrastructure Development: Launch of Special Issue of Third World Quarterly (Online)

Mon | June 15th, 2026 | 16:00 (CEST) Guest-edited by Detlef Müller-Mahn, Eric Kioko and Theo Aalders from our sub-project C03 “Green Futures”, this special ...
Read More »
cover for a web post

Call for Applications: PhD Scholarship – Violent Futures? Contestations Along Carbon Frontiers in East Africa

Our Subproject B03 “Violent Futures” is currently accepting applications for a PhD scholarship position. The project examines how future-oriented carbon credit projects shape social relations ...
Read More »
generic cover for a website post

Hunting, Environmental Change, and the Defaunation of Wildlife in Baringo, Kenya (1840–1977)

Hauke-Peter Vehrs (Project A04 “Future Conservation”) and David Anderson (Project A02 “Past Futures”) argue that the sharp decline of wildlife in Kenya’s Baringo region during ...
Read More »
generic cover for a web post

Workshop: Turning the Illiberal into the Convivial? Debating the Future of Wildlife Conservation in Africa

June 7th – 9th, 2026 | Cape Town Turning the Illiberal into the Convivial? Debating the Future of Wildlife Conservation in Africa This workshop critically ...
Read More »
logo of jkuat

Call for Applications: JKUAT Summer School on Transdisciplinary Methods for Studying Social-Ecological Systems

With funding from the Volkswagen Foundation, the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology (JKUAT) in Kenya in collaboration with the Research Unit on Agro-Pastoral, ...
Read More »
Scroll to Top