Abstract
A Reward for Patience and Suffering: Ethnomycology and Commodification of Desert
Truffles among Sahrawi Refugees and Nomads of Western Sahara. This paper reflects on the
role of ethnobiological knowledge and practices for refugees’ agency by focusing on the
use and commodification of desert truffles among the Sahrawi refugees of Western
Sahara. Historically, desert truffles of the genera Terfezia and Tirmania have been an
important food and medicinal resource for Saharan nomads. Today, after becoming
refugees following war and forced displacement, the Sahrawi still harvest truffles for their
use values, but most are sold in the Algerian town of Tindouf. This paper addresses Sahrawi
food, medicinal, and veterinary uses of desert truffles, and the on–going process of
commodification sustained by a high international demand and the need for cash income.
This process of commodification has both helped refugees to generate income and
triggered a recovery of traditional knowledge around desert truffles. However, it has also
led to increasing harvesting pressure and competition among truffle collectors, thus giving
rise to the risk of unsustainable harvest levels.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 147-160 |
Journal | Economic Botany |
Volume | 67 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2013 |
Keywords
- terfezia
- globalization
- tirmania