Open Grazing and Agricultural Decline in the Sahel, Africa: Economic Costs, Legal Challenges and Environmental Impacts

Nweke Edunna Daniel

Department of Theory and History of International Relations, Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN) Named after Patrice Lumumba, Moscow, Russia.

Gabriel Tobiloba Abioye

Department of Theory and History of International Relations, Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN) Named after Patrice Lumumba, Moscow, Russia.

Idiong Omodot Udim *

Department of Theory and History of International Relations, Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN) Named after Patrice Lumumba, Moscow, Russia.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Open grazing remains one of the most contentious land-use practices in the Sahel region, contributing to widespread agricultural, economic, and environmental instability. This manuscript investigates the economic effects of open grazing by synthesizing cross-disciplinary evidence from policy reports, empirical research, and legal documents. The study utilizes qualitative analysis through literature review and identifies key impact areas including crop destruction, reduced agricultural investment, household income loss, ecological degradation, and governance failures. It reveals that grazing-induced land conflicts and crop damage result in significant economic losses, with cascading effects on food security, labor productivity, and rural livelihoods. Furthermore, the research uncovers how weak enforcement of anti-grazing laws and absence of alternative pastoral systems hinder effective reform. Ecological assessments demonstrate that overgrazing leads to biodiversity loss, erosion, and declining soil fertility, worsening the region’s vulnerability to climate change. Legal analysis shows fragmented policies and resistance from national elites undermine local regulatory efforts. In response, the manuscript proposes multi-dimensional reform strategies including rotational grazing systems, land tenure security, legal harmonization, and inclusive conflict resolution frameworks. Through this holistic analysis, the study underscores the urgent need for policy integration and sustainable land management to address the intersecting economic, social, and environmental crises exacerbated by open grazing in the Sahel.

Keywords: Open grazing, agricultural loss, food insecurity, conflict escalation, Sahel region


How to Cite

Daniel, Nweke Edunna, Gabriel Tobiloba Abioye, and Idiong Omodot Udim. 2025. “Open Grazing and Agricultural Decline in the Sahel, Africa: Economic Costs, Legal Challenges and Environmental Impacts”. Asian Journal of Advanced Research and Reports 19 (7):337-47. https://doi.org/10.9734/ajarr/2025/v19i71102.

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