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Dr Brian Kipkoech, PhD

Food system and Security researcher



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Brian Kipkoech


Curriculum vitae



+254715604554


Faculty of Science and technology

Free University of Bolzano




Dr Brian Kipkoech, PhD

Food system and Security researcher



+254715604554


Faculty of Science and technology

Free University of Bolzano



Becoming Underutilised: Indigenous Crops and Foodways in Colonial Kenya


Journal article


Matthew J. Hannaford, Lilian Korir, Nana Afranaa Kwapong, James Chelanga, Michael Chesire, Esther N. Kioko, Brian Kipkoech, Costa Kokwon, P. Maundu, V. Ngumbau, Prisca Too
Journal of Agrarian Change, 2026

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Hannaford, M. J., Korir, L., Kwapong, N. A., Chelanga, J., Chesire, M., Kioko, E. N., … Too, P. (2026). Becoming Underutilised: Indigenous Crops and Foodways in Colonial Kenya. Journal of Agrarian Change.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Hannaford, Matthew J., Lilian Korir, Nana Afranaa Kwapong, James Chelanga, Michael Chesire, Esther N. Kioko, Brian Kipkoech, et al. “Becoming Underutilised: Indigenous Crops and Foodways in Colonial Kenya.” Journal of Agrarian Change (2026).


MLA   Click to copy
Hannaford, Matthew J., et al. “Becoming Underutilised: Indigenous Crops and Foodways in Colonial Kenya.” Journal of Agrarian Change, 2026.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{matthew2026a,
  title = {Becoming Underutilised: Indigenous Crops and Foodways in Colonial Kenya},
  year = {2026},
  journal = {Journal of Agrarian Change},
  author = {Hannaford, Matthew J. and Korir, Lilian and Kwapong, Nana Afranaa and Chelanga, James and Chesire, Michael and Kioko, Esther N. and Kipkoech, Brian and Kokwon, Costa and Maundu, P. and Ngumbau, V. and Too, Prisca}
}

Abstract

The material properties of ‘underutilised’ indigenous African crops have gained increasing attention in efforts to combat food insecurity. Understanding the opportunities and barriers to reviving indigenous crops today must begin by making sense of how such foodstuffs became underutilised in the first place. This article traces the transformation of foodways centred around indigenous crops in colonial Kenya (1890s–1963). Drawing on archival evidence and 79 oral histories from Baringo and Bomet counties, it explores how crop materialities, colonial state‐making and local resistance shaped patterns of agrarian change that marginalised, but by no means eradicated, indigenous crops and foodways. Although key drivers of change stemmed from interactions between crop materialities and political‐economic forces central to settler colonial domination in Kenya, we argue that nutritional knowledges, extreme weather events and pest outbreaks were important contributors to government interventions and local defence of foodways. We conclude by reflecting on the resurgence of indigenous crops.


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