This dissertation investigates the current status and attitudes toward traditional knowledge of ethnoveterinary medicines in a Maasai community in rural Tanzania, and the relationships between ethnoveterinary knowledge and formal education. It concludes that ethnoveterinary medicine still plays an important role in primary livestock health care in the village of Eluwai, and that formal schooling appears to have a negative impact on young people's ethnoveterinary knowledge. It also finds that a culturally sensitive education can have a positive impact on young peoples' attitudes toward traditional knowledge and practises such as ethnoveterinary medicine, suggesting that intercultural education may be a valuable tool in biocultural conservation. Furthermore, this study highlights the importance of practical and contextual experience for learning about ethnoveterinary medicine.
| Date of Award | 2013 |
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| Original language | English |
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| Awarding Institution | - University of Kent/Canterbury Christ Church University
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- Maasai; traditional knowledge; ethnoveterinary medicine; intercultural education; knowledge erosion; acculturation.
Investigating the relationships between formal schooling and ethnoveterinary knowledge in Eluwai village, Tanzania
Harvey, J. (Author). 2013
Student thesis: MRes