An agent-based model to understand the multiple uses of land and resources around drillings in Sahel
Bah, A. , Touré, I. , Le Page, C. , Ickowicz, A., Diop, A.T. An agent-based model to understand the multiple uses of land and resources around drillings in Sahel. Mathematical and Computer Modelling Volume 44, Issue 5-6, September 2006, Pages 513-534
Bah, A. , Touré, I. , Le Page, C. , Ickowicz, A., Diop, A.T.
An agent-based model to understand the multiple uses of land and
resources around drillings in Sahel. Mathematical and Computer
Modelling Volume 44, Issue 5-6, September 2006, Pages 513-534
Abstract - In Sahel, land and resources are used, according to the
seasons, by various actors with interests sometimes difficult to
conciliate. This spatial competition for the access to the natural
resources induces a set of processes leading to overgrazing and
conflicts for the access to water. In such a complex
agro-sylvo-pastoral context, acquiring and formalizing knowledge
about the practices and rules which govern the system are essential
to help and accompany the rural populations towards the sustainable
management of their environment. Among the new modelling tools
coming from the field of Artificial Intelligence, Agent-Based
Models (ABMs) are now widely used to tackle the issue of integrated
natural resource management. The increase in popularity of ABMs is
partially due to their intelligibility, not only by scientists from
various research fields, but also by stakeholders. It then becomes
easier to build an understandable representation of the system as
an "artificial world" and to perform simulations in order to
collectively test and discuss various scenarios about the resource
management. This paper describes an ABM which has been designed to
formalize the interactions between the biophysics dynamics of the
natural resources and the socio-economic factors driving the
land-use dynamics around the drilling of Thieul village in the
sylvo-pastoral area of Ferlo (Senegal). The first results show that
rainfall still plays an extremely significant role in the pastoral
system despite the drilling of boreholes. Paradoxically, steady
rainfall over long periods of time can lead to negative effects on
the relations between herders and farmers.



