Precarious work and environmental uncertainty in the Central Asian walnut trade
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Cambridge
Department Name: Social Anthropology
Abstract
I will research experiences of economic and environmental uncertainty amongst the walnut pickers and traders
associated with the walnut forest in the Jalal-Abad region of Kyrgyzstan. These livelihoods are economically precarious:
walnut pickers have been impoverished by the loss of waged work that accompanied the breakup of the Soviet Union,
and now rely mainly on selling walnuts for their incomes, the yields of which vary annually. To compound this precarity,
climate change is damaging walnut trees and rendering their yields more unpredictable. These uncertain working lives
are also configured by political-economic dynamics specific to Central Asia. In order to frame the interaction between
economic conditions and environmental change in this geographical setting, I will consider the literature on precarious
work and on Central Asian political-economic transformations, and will bring these bodies of work into conversation with
theoretical approaches which emphasise the agency of forests and landscapes. My fieldwork will be multi-sited, following
the journey of the walnut and its traders so as to reflect the fluidity of Central Asia and traders' experiences of
interconnectedness. This will also enable me to investigate the ways in which the agency of environmental change
travels through space. The fieldwork will involve participation in the walnut harvest, as well as carrying out interviews with
walnut pickers and mobile traders along the walnut commodity chain.
associated with the walnut forest in the Jalal-Abad region of Kyrgyzstan. These livelihoods are economically precarious:
walnut pickers have been impoverished by the loss of waged work that accompanied the breakup of the Soviet Union,
and now rely mainly on selling walnuts for their incomes, the yields of which vary annually. To compound this precarity,
climate change is damaging walnut trees and rendering their yields more unpredictable. These uncertain working lives
are also configured by political-economic dynamics specific to Central Asia. In order to frame the interaction between
economic conditions and environmental change in this geographical setting, I will consider the literature on precarious
work and on Central Asian political-economic transformations, and will bring these bodies of work into conversation with
theoretical approaches which emphasise the agency of forests and landscapes. My fieldwork will be multi-sited, following
the journey of the walnut and its traders so as to reflect the fluidity of Central Asia and traders' experiences of
interconnectedness. This will also enable me to investigate the ways in which the agency of environmental change
travels through space. The fieldwork will involve participation in the walnut harvest, as well as carrying out interviews with
walnut pickers and mobile traders along the walnut commodity chain.
Organisations
People |
ORCID iD |
Rachel Kay (Student) |
Studentship Projects
Project Reference | Relationship | Related To | Start | End | Student Name |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ES/P000738/1 | 01/10/2017 | 30/09/2027 | |||
2751895 | Studentship | ES/P000738/1 | 01/10/2022 | 30/06/2026 | Rachel Kay |