The Weatherman: The Making of Prepared Farmers and the Postcolonial Predictive State in Kenya

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Abstract

This article explores weather forecasting as an emergent technology of governmentality through a detailed ethnography of the ways in which the relationships between weather and crops are rendered knowable in a two-day “participatory scenario planning” (PSP) workshop in Naromoru in the Central Highlands of Kenya. Farmers were “made into meteorologists” and developed their preparedness for hazards, impacts, opportunities, strategies, and responsibilities within the context of facing El Niño. The ethnography targets seemingly novel ways of preparing farmers for El Niño. I argue that the PSP served two principal functions: (1) to redistribute responsibilities of the farmers themselves by making them into “meteorologists”; and (2) to integrate “scientific expertise” with “local knowledge” to generate public trust in the metrological institutions of the postcolonial predictive state.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftNature and Culture
Vol/bind14
Udgave nummer3
Sider (fra-til)271-281
Antal sider11
ISSN1558-6073
DOI
StatusUdgivet - dec. 2019

Emneord

  • Agrometeorology
  • El Niño
  • Governmentality
  • Participation
  • Postcolonial Kenya
  • Predictive state
  • Scenario building

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