Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T19:19:34.248Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Making Malagasy Zebu: The Biopolitics of Cattle Commodification in Socialist Madagascar, 1960–1978

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2023

Tasha Rijke-Epstein*
Affiliation:
Department of History, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

At the dawn of Madagascar’s independence in 1960, political entrepreneurs harnessed the enduring significance of Malagasy cattle, known as zebu, and declared them integral to the new national identity. From 1960–1972, President Philibert Tsiranana led the country through the period known as the First Republic, in which officials and technocrats launched development projects around breeding and constructing abattoirs and feedlots, in the hopes of creating a viable international meat export economy. For elites, zebu served as speculative vessels for remaking economic and political geographies and shifting away from dependence on French interests. Malagasy government officials and technical experts saw pastoralists as key to actualizing the economic potential of cattle and they sought to combat “peasant idleness” as a hindrance to Madagascar’s flourishing. Pastoralists, though, challenged the bounds of top-down authority and debated the kinds of knowledge that could and should inform modernization projects in the new nation-state. Cattle ranchers’ critiques of the logics and encroachment of prescriptive modernization schemes during the 1960s and 1970s can be understood as their insistence on sharing in the fruits of independence, and that they, with their deep knowledge of cattle behavior, had a role to play in forging meaningful, prosperous lives in broader ancestor-focused cosmologies. Investigating the twinned history of Madagascar’s beef exportation and cattle modernization plans reveals how cattle were enlisted in the project of nation-making and a crucial moment of possibility, in which state-crafters ambitiously pursued a path toward self-determination while navigating oscillating geopolitics and asymmetrical global economic relations.

Type
Rethinking Work in Late Twentieth-Century Socialism
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History

If Malagasy readers saw newspaper headlines in Madagascar on 21 June 1972, they would have encountered a by-then-familiar narrative about cattle owners, Malagasy cattle (known as zebu), and economic growth in the newly independent nation. One columnist described how pastoralists were foiling the long-anticipated development plans for the socialist government’s Ferme d’État Omby (state model ranch) near the island’s largest cattle market in Tsiroanomandidy (see Map 1), designed to instruct local owners in intensive fattening, disease prevention, and breeding practices.Footnote 1 Over the previous several years, dozens of “young Brahmans” had been air shipped from Texas to the ranch, where they were surveilled, acclimatized, and nourished for crossbreeding experiments in the confines of fenced pastures—fences which cut right through pasture lands utilized by local pastoralists.Footnote 2 The state-run ranch was, in one newspaper’s words, part of the “conquest of the west” to which cattle owners were vehemently opposed.Footnote 3

Map 1. Beef Cattle Development Project Sites, Madagascar, 1960s–1970s. See note 43 regarding place names. Map by Tim Stallmann.

Pastoralists were not just angry about the state’s spatial incursion; there was also the issue of time and technical sensibilities. Echoing well-worn characterizations, journalists described the “fundamental difference between progress and tradition” which beset the project and prevented short-sighted, obstinate cattle herders from grasping how their zebu could grow more quickly through intensified feeding and pasturing practices based on confinement.Footnote 4 One columnist confidently proclaimed that “once the pastoralist saw his zebu getting thinner during the dry season and the one of the neighboring ranch keeping its meat” then he would cast off the mantle of traditionalism to enjoy the fruits of modern livestock farming.Footnote 5 Yet pastoralists’ objections were not for want of understanding. They clearly grasped the intentions of the state’s ranch modernization scheme and the growth-based economic development model that mirrored land-encroaching and intrusive livestock improvement projects during French colonial rule (1896–1960). Cattle owners’ critiques rather fell on the state’s foray into their “rhythm of life” that accompanied the arrival of “vazaha” (foreign) zebus. Footnote 6 Pastoralists were rightly concerned about losing control over their time, since agricultural modernization schemes, much like the factories and mills of eighteenth-century Europe, were indeed sites of rigorous “time-discipline” impositions.Footnote 7

Embedded within pastoralists’ critiques, moreover, was an insistence on the value of their time-honed knowledge of raising and slaughtering zebu, based on collective experiments with optimal temporalities and conditions of cattle life. Over generations, pastoralists around Tsiroanomandidy and beyond had developed strategies that maximized the merits of measured, patient fattening of young cattle and drew on cattle lifespans to sustain human social reproduction. Like the elite technocrats and foreign technical experts who promoted the state-run ranch, pastoralists similarly understood zebu as key to prosperity, as expressed in the proverb, “ox is for human above all, as the life of human life.”Footnote 8 But the technical means through which cattle would make humans prosperous, and the question of who would so prosper, were core to their contention.

This article investigates overlapping livestock development projects in post-colonial Madagascar (1960s–1970s), where Malagasy elites, French technical experts, diplomats, investors, and cattle ranchers all probed the dynamically unfolding potential of the island. By following zebu—from pastures to experimental stations, ranches and feedlots, marketplaces and abattoirs, canning factories and dining tables—I explore several questions: How were cattle enrolled in contestations over authority, knowledge, and worldmaking in postcolonial Madagascar? What kinds of political and economic constellations emerged in and around the body of the zebu? If cattle were central to the technopolitical assemblages that aspiring nation-makers implemented in the 1960s and 1970s, then what were the limits to which modernization schemes could remake cattle and pastoralists within biopolitical projects to forge the new nation-state? As animate agents within material networks of an emergent beef export economy, cattle and their owners at times exceeded the plans of technocrats and pushed for new possibilities for life-making in the Malagasy nation state.

Although the details of this case are particular to Madagascar, the implications of taking seriously the more-than-human world stretch to broader contexts of modernization in the era of decolonization across Africa and beyond.Footnote 9 When African nations seized their independence in the 1960s and 1970s, postcolonial elites catalyzed modernization schemes in their efforts to build new independent political and economic futures. Rather than rotely accepting proffered development models, they selectively engaged the ideologies and technological know-how of wide-ranging socialist and capitalist regimes.Footnote 10 For technocrats and officials, large-scale infrastructure projects were at once the manifestation of modernity, the channel to deeper engagements with world markets, and the means through which ostensibly “backward” segments of the population—whether peasants, artisans or, in this case, pastoralists—could be transformed into modern citizens through intensified use of technology.Footnote 11 As scholars have shown elsewhere, displacements of power and shifting geographies of food production emerged from deeper histories of development that manifest the technopolitical legacies of colonial (dis)orders and Cold War contestations.Footnote 12

Here I will build on existing scholarship around modernization schemes to work toward a more nuanced understanding of nation-building in post-colonial Africa as a set of material, socio-political, and technological practices elite officials harnessed to advance autonomous participation in the global order, even while constrained by colonial legacies, competing knowledge regimes, and the conditions of animate life.Footnote 13 Like laborers elsewhere on the continent, Malagasy zebu ranchers foiled officials’ assumptions that they would readily adopt the mechanization of their work, and pushed back on the conditions around cattle breeding, intensified feeding, and slaughter imposed on them by state authorities, scientists, and technicians.Footnote 14 Cattle development projects were sites where cattle ranchers challenged the bounds of top-down authority and debated the kinds of knowledge that could and should inform modernization projects in the new Malagasy nation-state. Pastoralists’ critiques of the logics and encroachment of prescriptive modernization schemes during the 1960s and 1970s can be understood as an insistence not only that “the benefits of global interaction should come to them” but also on the importance of their deep knowledge of cattle behavior and their role in forging meaningful, prosperous lives in broader ancestor-focused cosmologies.Footnote 15

At the same time, the bodies of zebu served as speculative vessels for “refiguring global technopolitical geographies” involving national leaders, determined pastoralists, frustrated veterinarians, hungry consumers, and mournful former colonizers.Footnote 16 From colonial times through the 1960s, veterinary experts sought to re-engineer zebu bodies into more perfect commodities through intensive vaccination campaigns, improved feeding schemes, and crossbreeding with widely distributed fellow breeds, especially French Limousin, Texas Brahman, and South African Afrikaner cattle. Not only did re-engineered Malagasy zebu embody organic material and ideas from across the world, but they also generated unanticipated economic constellations as vital commodities. While conserved and frozen zebu beef had long been exported to France, from the 1960s Madagascar began supplying meat in pathways that defied earlier agricultural commodity flows from the colony to the metropole—instead circulating to far-reaching consumers including Israel, Kuwait, and Ghana. In the postwar era of expanding global beef consumption and industrialized food production, Malagasy officials worked to minimize dependency on France by cultivating relations with a wider set of international allies, including Japanese investors interested in securing access to zebu products and Zambian importers seeking to satisfy rising consumer demand. Madagascar’s early success as a global meat exporter, however, was stymied in the mid-1970s by a contingent series of disease, climatic, and economic events coupled with long-standing rancor among pastoralists about the continued impingement of the state and intrusive predations of foreign investors into cattle farming.

This story of postcolonial cattle development projects in Madagascar elicits two main insights: one into histories of environment and livestock-based economies, and a second into nation-making in the era of decolonization. First, scholarship has shown the centrality of animate life to the making of regional economic networks and alternative political imaginaries. Livestock animals, especially cattle, pigs, and chickens, have been remarkably frequent figures in colonial, capitalist, and developmentalist projects, circulating across wide-ranging geographical, ideological, and economic contexts.Footnote 17 Their integral place and sheer ubiquity across histories and societies signals their potential for meaning-making, for engendering new relationships to food and the body, and for conscription into visions of national futurity.Footnote 18 Recently historians have shown how global provisioning economies shifted markedly during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, driven by growing urbanization, insatiably carnivorous appetites, expanded transportation networks, and new technologies of meatpacking and cold storage.Footnote 19 Rather than regional circuits of production and consumption, European consumers increasingly ate meat slaughtered in faraway, overseas plants—whether Brazil, Argentina, North America, Australia, or New Zealand. With few exceptions, though, this work has generally focused on domestic, colonial, and imperial contexts centering consumers in North America and Europe and has rarely appraised alternative commercial trajectories of meat, let alone in times of decolonization.Footnote 20 Nor do we fully understand how and why some cattle-abundant countries, like Brazil and Argentina, became key suppliers in the global meat trade well into contemporary times, while others did not despite possessing comparable cattle wealth.

This article offers a different social and economic geography of meat circulation by centering Madagascar’s role as a fluctuating site of beef production, even while provision was ever entangled in complex webs of local consumption.Footnote 21 Madagascar has historically held enormous bovine stock, hovering in the range of eight to ten million over the last half century.Footnote 22 In 1961, cattle outnumbered the country’s population of 5.2 million by 1.6 cattle to every person, and continued to do so even while the island’s population grew in the 1960s and 1970s to about 8.7 million people in 1980.Footnote 23 Madagascar had far more cattle per capita than some large cattle holding countries such as Brazil, but a proportion similar to other cattle-rich African nations such as Zambia, Botswana, and Kenya. Madagascar’s prospects for increasing meat exports hinged on intensified development schemes with roots in the late colonial period, including genetic breeding and construction of abattoirs and material infrastructure. Tracing these geographies not only disrupts assumptions about economic relations between centers and peripheries; it also sheds light on the seizure of agential possibilities for collaboration and exchange among aspiring Malagasy nation-makers who strove to circumvent entrenched, colonial-era economic dependencies on France by fostering new economic and diplomatic relationships with unexpected allies. Investigating the twinned history of Madagascar’s beef exportation and cattle modernization plans—though they were short-lived—reveals a crucial moment of possibility in the years after independence, when aspiring state-crafters pursued a path of self-determination while navigating oscillating geopolitics and asymmetrical global economic relations.

Running parallel to this, historians of nation-building in Africa and South Asia have shown how, during the 1960s and 1970s, the efforts of post-imperial political actors’ to reimagine the terms of solidarity and sovereignty were constrained by a global political economy of ever-narrowing possibilities.Footnote 24 Developmentalism, beginning in late colonial times and continuing into the years following independence, was characterized by uneven networks in which technical experts gained prime positioning to exert increasing influence over the course of economic and technopolitical arrangements.Footnote 25 Scholars have shown how intensive agro-industrial projects have been central to the making of national identities and alternative modernities, just as enterprising postcolonial political thinkers across feudal, capitalist, socialist, or fascist regimes have enrolled the animate world in their quests to form new political formations.Footnote 26 Bringing animals into histories of modernization in the era of decolonization can illuminate how nation-building development schemes—whether socialist or capitalist in orientation—were not only economic, discursive, and technological projects; they were profoundly shaped by the creative capacities (and constraints) of the more-than-human world. The making of the Malagasy socialist nation through meat exportation relied on the crucial “metabolic labor” of Malagasy zebu who transformed energy-rich grasses into meat and hides, and their commensal compliance with human-driven projects that rendered large-scale extractive projects imaginable and possible.Footnote 27 Ultimately, cattle-centered development projects in the 1960s and 1970s were constituted by fundamental struggles over not only who could control the more-than-human world, but also competing knowledge frameworks and cosmologies through which cattle (in all their potentiality)—and the world—could be remade.

Tracing animals’ complex roles in developmentalist projects requires ferreting out the moments when humans thought their presence worth recording. Animals tend to surface in archival records when their entanglements with human communities, experts, and officials crystallized, confirmed, or cast doubt on existing understandings of the rhythms and textures of human-animal life. While proverbs, archaeological evidence, and ethnological accounts provide important perspectives on human-zebu interactions over time, declassified diplomatic records, scientific studies, and technical assistance reports offer critical insights into the ever-shifting place of zebu in nationalist-oriented developmentalist projects. Zebu make uneven appearances in the copious records of technical assistance projects, sometimes as subject of laborious counts and meticulous quantitative calculations and at other times as objects of control, but such sources also reveal what Efrat Gilad calls “flickers of animal agency.”Footnote 28 Though diplomatic and technical records have their problems, they do reveal anxieties over the waning French presence in socialist Madagascar, the limits of “technical diplomacy,” and the politics of brokering knowledge in the age of decolonization, when Malagasy authorities were gradually supplanting French alliances.Footnote 29 When coupled with official speeches of Malagasy leaders and Malagasy newspapers, these records also reveal the extensive debates and heterogeneous ideas that circulated among Malagasy officials, and pastoralists on the ground, about what constituted “Malagasy socialism” and how best to harness zebu in the pursuit of self-reliance.

Colonial Inheritances and the Promises of Meat Exportation, 1960–1968

As across much of the African continent, cattle in Madagascar have long been protagonists in histories of sociality, co-existing with and sustaining human communities as steadfast companions through ecological, economic, and political tumults. According to recent genetic research, the Malagasy zebu (omby or jamoka in Malagasy) derive from Bos indicus which spread from the Indus Valley thousands of years ago. They were likely transported to Madagascar by Indian Ocean traders, as early as the ninth century.Footnote 30 As human populations grew, cattle were critical to the thriving of early settlements, and by the twelfth century, in certain regions, their numbers were double that of the human population.Footnote 31 Zebu’s voracious appetite for grasses prompted a decisive shift in human land use beginning around 1000 CE, especially in northwest Madagascar, when pastoralists used fire to convert semi-forested terrain to pasture.Footnote 32 Leading up to the nineteenth century, pastoralism sustained communities in the island’s southern and western regions, where cattle served as markers of status and repositories of wealth.Footnote 33 Like in other parts of the world, Malagasy pastoralists distinguished cattle from other animate species for their “sacred character.”Footnote 34 Not only were they critical to livelihoods and communal prosperity, but zebu were (and continue to be) slaughtered at life-cycle celebrations, incorporated into funerary art, and regarded as conduits to the ancestors.Footnote 35

Cattle were pulled into vibrant commercial networks starting in the sixteenth century, when they were traded among Antalaotra (Swahili) and European merchants, Merina elites in highland Madagascar, and plantation owners in the Mascarenes.Footnote 36 In the early nineteenth century, under the highland Merina kingdom, Madagascar’s live cattle exports to the Mascarenes grew exponentially.Footnote 37 While local markets consumed modest amounts of cattle products including tallow for caulk, horns for cooking utensils, and bones for buttons, European consumers increasingly demanded large volumes of salted beef, tallow, and hides, culminating in the late nineteenth century.Footnote 38 Following French colonial conquest in 1895–1896, cattle were central to visions of the island’s economic prosperity. Colonial officials sought to wrest control over cattle’s mobility, implement livestock tax schemes, and boost revenues from commodity chains of hide and beef production. Evading the rinderpest epizootics sweeping across Africa, they invested considerable resources in boosting export trade in cattle products, especially meat conserves and hides, by allocating generous concessions to colons and building up beef-tinning factories beginning in the late 1920s.Footnote 39 Nonetheless, their efforts were often frustrated by clever pastoralists and unruly cattle thieves equipped with intimate knowledges of their herds and the ecological worlds in which they pastured.Footnote 40

Beginning in the 1930s, French and Malagasy veterinary scientists for decades conducted genetic engineering experiments involving Malagasy cattle in which some twenty “exterior races” were introduced by plane and boat from Europe, the United States, and India in hopes of creating a “higher quality” breed.Footnote 41 Specifically, scientists aimed for a crossbreed with zebu’s strong immunity but with higher fertility, lower fat percentage, and better flavor, scent, and moisture level (“organoleptic qualities”).Footnote 42 Scientists working at the Laboratoire Veterinaire Joseph Carougeau in Tananarive [Antananarivo] asserted that Malagasy zebu was too grainy and bland for export-quality butchering, but that this did not have to be the case.Footnote 43 Genetic engineering interventions could produce a breed with strengthened hindquarters, a faster pace of growth, and a longer lifespan, on which an export economy could be built.Footnote 44 By alternately crossing Malagasy zebu with Brahman bulls from Texas, they hoped to develop a breed which could be raised intensively and slaughtered younger to meet the tastes of consumers abroad.Footnote 45 In this framework, pastoralists would continue to raise vast herds of free-range Malagasy zebu, whose meat was suitable for canning or conserving in colonial-era factories.Footnote 46

Malagasy pastoralists themselves had long engaged in their own breeding experiments, which had resulted in a hardy breed—the Malagasy zebu—able to withstand long periods of drought and capable of formidable labor. Pastures across Madagascar were fluid laboratories, as Shadreck Chirikure and Chakanetsa Mavhunga argue for elsewhere on the African continent, in which cattle breeders developed knowledge and produced new technological outcomes and ideas.Footnote 47 Malagasy cattle owners continued to shape veterinary expertise on cattle breeding at the Kianjasoa Center for Zootechnical Research in central-west Bongolava region, far from the bustling streets of Tananarive [Antananarivo] and the Carougeau lab. French and Malagasy veterinary scientists founded the center for breeding experiments in the 1930s and depended on the area’s Malagasy breeders as collaborators.Footnote 48 Although never named in scientific reports and rarely recognized as knowledge producers, Malagasy pastoralists provided crucial labor and expertise including access to livestock, appraisals of the results of crossbreeding trials, and assessments of pastoralists’ aesthetic preferences for certain bodily attributes. Multiple efforts to cross zebu with Limousin cattle from France, for instance, resulted in cattle which fared well in field stations, but cattle herders found they languished in ordinary pastoralist conditions.Footnote 49 Next, in the 1940s, scientists imported Afrikaner bulls from South Africa, but the resulting beef was “bland, with a coarse grain” and Malagasy breeders rejected their “long and lateral” horns.Footnote 50 By the 1950s, scientists ventured to cross all three breeds—zebu, Limousin, and Afrikaner—with promising results.Footnote 51 When compared with zebu, these tri-bred oxen had wider midsections and rounder, better developed muscles and “more tasty and tender” flesh, and were exceptionally strong and resilient transporters and draft animals.Footnote 52 But alas, cattle owners found their lack of a fatty, dorsal hump, the distinctive feature of zebu, aesthetically unappealing.Footnote 53 In short, cattle were sites of meaning, contestation, and knowledge-making in the lead-up to Madagascar’s independence.

Madagascar seized its independence in 1960. From then until 1972, a period known as the First Republic, the country was led by President Philibert Tsiranana, a former schoolteacher. This era is marked in both popular imagination and scholarly accounts as “neo-colonial” owing to the retention of arrangements of French colonial rule: its highly centralized social democratic system, French as the language of educational instruction, and continuing close ties to French concessionaires, diplomats, and financiers. Tsiranana’s regime was characterized by noisy debate, competing visions, and divergent ideas regarding the island nation’s political future and economic viability. Early in his tenure, Tsiranana emphasized “Malagasy socialism” as the guiding ideology of development, a move meant to suture together radical activists pressing for a Marxist-Leninist stance and more conservative clusters that advocated retaining close relations with France.Footnote 54 High-ranking officials within Tsiranana’s socialist democratic party (Partie Socialiste Democratique, herein PSD) debated socialism’s ideological content and optimal trajectory, but all factions supported the expansion and modernization of the agricultural sector.Footnote 55 Tsiranana and his more conservative allies advocated maintaining tight economic and scientific alliances with the French government, industries, and research labs to enable agricultural developmentalist projects.

Like postcolonial leaders elsewhere, Malagasy elites mythologized decolonization as a clean break from the colonial past to advance their vision of a new and modern nation-state saturated with a distinctive “Malagasy” cultural bent.Footnote 56 Official pronouncements by Tsiranana and others steered clear of overt ideologically grounded alliances and emphasized instead the homegrown nature of Malagasy socialism as “our socialism, a practical and human socialism which lives and prospers without being preoccupied with grand theories….”Footnote 57 Anchoring Malagasy socialism in the very foundation of Malagasy cosmologies—the ancestors—officials sought to legitimize their approach by steeping it in an egalitarian, communitarian ethos, marked by work, solidarity, and “love of our country in the awakening of socialist traditions of our ancestors.”Footnote 58

Official discourses of ancestrally rooted Malagasy socialism were paired with the central role peasants and pastoralists would have in forging the new Malagasy nation.Footnote 59 In 1962, Malagasy government officials set out an ambitious plan to increase agricultural productivity by 57 percent between 1960–1963, striving for agricultural self-reliance—a keyword of African socialist regimes.Footnote 60 Here, self-reliance was officially defined as “preventing food imports” and building a thriving export economy, and it would continue to feature as a central dimension of postcolonial citizenship well beyond the fledging days after independence.Footnote 61 The mechanisms for realizing this vision included the establishment of joint private-public large farming operations and, later, cooperative farms and agricultural unions, all of which rested on the labor of peasants.Footnote 62 Across African socialist regimes such as Nyerere’s Tanzania, Sekou Touré’s Guinea, and Frelimo’s Mozambique, peasants were seen as the cornerstone of economic development plans, but simultaneously portrayed as backward communities hindering progress.Footnote 63 Likewise in Madagascar, peasants were ambivalently cast as either archaic obstacles or crucial agents.Footnote 64 Tsiranana and others complained that Malagasy were bound by both “ancient beliefs” in prohibitions (fady) on certain work days and a certain “indolence” that limited their productive labor to 100–125 days per year, with the rest of the time spent “contemplating cattle.”Footnote 65 But then, peasants, including pastoralists, were portrayed as key “collaborators” who were crucial to bringing to fruition agricultural plans, a framing that masked the asymmetrical power relations between farmers and the state.Footnote 66

One thing clear to political entrepreneurs forging the new nation-state was the enduring significance of cattle and pastoralists in any modernization plans. Malagasy officials declared that zebu had an integral place in the new national identity, evidenced in the prominence of the distinctive zebu horns in the country’s official coat of arms. For early Malagasy planners—transforming the island into a modern, independent nation-state would depend on galvanizing peasants and pastoralists as full agents of progress. In Tsiranana’s words, “…we don’t want to make oxen, but breeders … the peasant is not an apathetic instrument in the hands of the technicians, but a being capable of initiative.…”Footnote 67 Like their counterparts in other socialist African nation-states, peasants and pastoralists would not only propel the nation forward, but become the very embodiment of hoped-for modernization.Footnote 68 If peasants needed to be disciplined to ensure Madagascar’s prosperous future in the postcolonial era, then cattle were close behind as necessary subjects of biopolitical transformation in broader developmentalist schemes.

Such postcolonial projects followed from colonial studies and were driven, in part, to address a perceived paradox of Madagascar’s cattle population, a perception that would drive cattle development projects well after 1960: The island boasted an exceedingly high cattle population—some nine million, amounting to 1.5 cattle/per capita in 1960—making it “one of the most affluent countries” in cattle holdings worldwide.Footnote 69 With such livestock wealth, French economists, officials, and livestock specialists surmised, the country ought to “occupy an important position in global trade in meat,” and yet exports were minimal and comprised only a tiny fraction of the global meat market.Footnote 70 Other scientists argued that despite the large number of cattle the overall count was diminishing and so it was critical to employ breeding to cultivate a larger oxen that could yield more meat.Footnote 71 Cattle had a remarkable physiological ability to elastically expand the size of their bodies through crossbreeding and feeding practices. This allowed technocrats to imagine an expansion of the island’s meat economy, which would undergird future visions for the postcolonial era. At the cusp of the island’s independence in 1960, with the recent results of the “three-race crossbreed” experiments bringing together Afrikaner, Limousin, and Malagasy cattle, veterinary scientists felt momentum building toward a cattle breed that would yield more viable export-quality beef, after the many dashed attempts of the colonial period. Lingering ties with France in the early years of independence, solidified through cooperative agreements, enabled a wide range of French technical experts (by some accounts numbering over seven hundred in 1962) to be centrally involved in providing specific recommendations for development plans, including for livestock breeding.Footnote 72

Enterprising Malagasy political leaders took up these colonial-era plans to bolster and refine Madagascar’s livestock population for exportation and wove them into their strategies to end dependence on the French metropole.Footnote 73 In 1962, scientists and Malagasy officials inaugurated the “three-race” zebu as “Renitelo” (three mothers), and declared that pastoralists found attributes of the new breed promising and appealing.Footnote 74 That same year, officials, through the French Ministry of Cooperation, invited a team of veterinary scientists to study existing cattle farming practices and propose interventions to enhance meat production. The team, headed by chief veterinarian Marcel Lacrouts, identified the biggest obstacle to a viable cattle export economy as the “astonishing rate of autoconsommation” (self-consumption).Footnote 75 According to their estimates, 75 percent of slaughtered cattle were consumed by breeders themselves, namely, and even exclusively, for ritual practices around circumcision, marriage, propitious crops, and especially funerals.Footnote 76 Malagasy cattle owners responded to Lacrouts and his team by affirming the centrality of cattle as key, life-sustaining intermediaries between the living and the ancestors, as animate actors that served at once as vestibules of wealth, avatars of hope, and companions helping to bridge spirit and earthly realms. As one man explained to the team, he would rather buy a heifer than a radio, since a radio “does not give life.”Footnote 77 Malagasy privileging of feeding collective selfhood through these rituals over appetites in faraway locales frustrated French officials, who saw ritual consumption as “irrational.”Footnote 78

In describing Malagasy cattle practices as “life-giving,” cattle owners were signaling a field of pluralistic expert knowledge in which they were key players. Pastoralists possessed a long-developed acumen in reading their herd, noting the distinctive features and behaviors of individual zebu, which they expressed with an extensive bovine lexicon, such as “bull with large eyes” (ombalahy be maso), “ox whose hump, head, and other areas are white” (omby vatoambo), or “young bull who pushes his horns against the earth” (omby mitrongy tany).Footnote 79 Not only were cattle observed for their physical traits, they were individually named and fiercely protected. In response to periods of political and economic instability, cattle owners honed selection and pasturage strategies, including keeping aged zebu with proven immunity as long as possible; burning choice areas of herbaceous grasses to rejuvenate pastures; and selectively rounding up and enclosing herds in the evenings to protect them against cattle raiders.Footnote 80 They were not the only experts in appraising zebu. Ritual practitioners (diviners known as moasy in the west and mpanandro in the highlands, but also spirit mediums) were historically tasked with carefully selecting cattle for sacrifice and assessing their suitability for ancestral rituals, based on their coat, complexion, and disposition.Footnote 81 Malagasy rituals also served as important technologies of inhibition and constraint that served (though not unfailingly) to keep cattle populations viable and human communities prosperous. Although French officials grouped these rituals as “self-consumption” practices, they contrasted starkly with cancerous models of economic growth “predicated on uninhibited consumption”—what Julie Livingston termed “self-devouring growth”—that marked and took dominance in the post-World War II era.Footnote 82

For their part, Malagasy zebu were constitutive elements of both ancestrally oriented cosmologies and intensified state-driven efforts to commodify animal life. Again, cattle were valued for the authentication and marking of ritual performances and crucial to remaking social collectivities. As resilient draught animals, zebu provided critical agricultural labor for rice-farmers including tilling the soils, and also manure for reconstituting them.Footnote 83 With a slower metabolic rate and fewer nutritional needs than Bos taurus cattle, Malagasy zebu were highly efficient accumulators of energy, transforming grasses into flesh for human consumption. In the words of one French scientist, zebu were “destined to make muscle.”Footnote 84 Their remarkable immunological strength and hardiness in the face of drought and food shortages were key to their selection as accumulative vessels by pastoralists, and also to their targeting for commodification by technocrats and elite politicians.Footnote 85 However, their erratic reproductive cycles and sinewy muscular texture later constrained top-down efforts to standardize and transform their bodies into desirable export commodities.

Seizing on zebu’s corporeal affordances, Malagasy officials and French technocrats together developed visions of a comprehensive assemblage of ecological and infrastructural investments for beef commodification. Fattening Malagasy zebu to appeal to the palates of overseas consumers required cultivating appealing pasture grasses of varying degrees of fibrousness and reorganizing rural spaces to foster intensive rearing and feeding. Agronomists in Madagascar asserted the importance of zebu’s highly developed feeding instinct and strong preferences for fragrant, succulent, cellulose-rich pasture grasses. By enriching soil content for growing grasses, they strove to satisfy the zebu’s hearty appetite and sensorial desires, since cattle, in the words of one soil scientist, “look for pleasure in rumination and know to balance its intake of young, tender elements with harder ones.”Footnote 86 Most critical for the development of Madagascar’s export meat economy, though, was the need to expand and integrate an assemblage of feedlots, experimentation stations, and transportation infrastructures. In particular, Lacrouts’ report advised that a most serious hindrance was the colonial-era abattoirs, which were in “deplorable conditions.”Footnote 87 Like other nation builders in Africa and Asia, Malagasy officials found possibilities in infrastructure—in its promises, materials, and symbolic heft—for marking a new moment of nationhood and navigating economic and diplomatic exchanges within the constraints of the Cold War era.Footnote 88

Stewarding Meat: Madagascar’s “National Treasure,” 1965–1972

Malagasy officials immediately began to develop plans for the construction of six new slaughterhouses, fully equipped with cold storage and conveyer belts, and located near major cities across the island (Tananarive [Antananarivo], Majunga [Mahajanga], Tamatave [Toamasina], Diego-Suarez [Antsiranana], Fort Dauphin [Taolagnaro], and Morondava). Authorities found an array of possibilities for the alliances, technical assistance, and international investments needed to drive the projects forward. As historian Abou Bamba has recently argued for Cote d’Ivoire, French technical experts often enjoyed privileged access in Francophone Africa but increasingly encountered competition from American technocrats, aid agencies, and firms, each vying for influence.Footnote 89 Like their counterparts in West Africa, Malagasy postcolonial leaders evaluated wide-ranging development partners—American, Greek, German, Soviet, and Israeli—while still retaining connections to French technical assistants. French officials were particularly worried about losing ground in Madagascar, which had long served as a critical node for strategic economic and political interests in the otherwise Anglophone-dominated East African and Indian Ocean region.

In pushing the abattoir projects forward, Malagasy officials seized the affordances and leverage of development in the Cold War context and deftly side-stepped French diplomats and investors. Japanese technical diplomats, drawn by the island’s enormous herds and low labor costs, were among those that presented themselves to Malagasy elites as prospective economic partners. Beginning in 1967 and building on their earlier fish cannery projects on the island, several Japanese meat packing companies undertook successive research missions to investigate the possibility of importing zebu to Japanese consumer markets.Footnote 90 These explorations were ultimately fruitful, with one delegation to an abattoir in Tulear pronouncing Malagasy zebu meat as “good at the factory and succulent at the table.”Footnote 91 Between 1968 and 1970, officials in Madagascar’s Ministry of Agriculture signed multiple agreements with Japanese investors to establish state farms to produce beef concentrate suitable for bouillon and spices.Footnote 92 Generally, while Malagasy authorities retained a 51 percent share in the ventures, with Japanese investors keeping 49 percent, the revenues generated on Japan’s consumer markets fell beyond Malagasy control and Japanese investors stood to gain considerably. For instance, in one agreement between Kawakami International, Fuji Seasoning Industry, and the Malagasy Ministry of Agriculture, Japanese signatories agreed to provide technical assistance to Malagasy elites and “guarantee” the consumer market, so long as they retained control over their copyrighted patent on the concentrate, which they called “polypeptide.”Footnote 93 Such projects were propelled by a growing global food industry that drew increasingly on engineered, cheaply produced additives to preserve and enhance flavor for a range of processed food products. Such developmentalist projects constrained the ability of Malagasy officials to garner maximum revenues from export markets, but they also offered appealing prospects to upend neocolonial French dominance in economic and technical affairs.

Although Malagasy elites developed ties with other international partners, by the late 1960s they reinvigorated connections with French scientists to access technical expertise on how to harness the value of zebu. In the mid-1960s, concerns in Madagascar about converting cattle “waste” into valuable commodities converged with anxieties in Europe and North America about global meat shortages. It was predicted that between 1965 and 1975 Madagascar could increase its exportation of zebu beef to 155,000 tons per year (in addition to more modest exports of pork and chicken), and 100,000 tons of frozen or canned meat per year.Footnote 94 This urgency galvanized officials’ plans for the construction of intensive feedlots and abattoirs, especially in the two key cattle-producing regions of Majunga [Mahajanga] and Tananarive [Antananarivo] in the northwest and central highlands, respectively. In the spirit of standardization, planners plotted out nearly identical cattle complexes in each city—consisting of four ranches (categorized as semi-extensive) of 20,000 hectares each and producing four thousand cattle per year, each weighing 400 kilograms (producing 200 kilograms of carcass flesh). An additional industrial, intensive feedlot of 850 hectares would, over two to six months, fatten thirty thousand cattle for slaughter annually.Footnote 95 Authorities undertook a flurry of studies to determine the technical specifications for these facilities, sought investors and bids for contractors for the construction of the abattoir, and planned new roads and terrain preparation.

Most of these projects only came to fruition years or even decades later, yet their plans broadcasted an image of Madagascar as a viable meat supplier to the global world. Working with its limited infrastructure of abattoirs, and capitalizing on the ravenous global consumer market, beef suppliers began increasing exports to Reunion and Mauritius, Japan, Ghana, Greece, Israel, and Kuwait.Footnote 96 In 1965 meat exports increased by 30 percent, but still totaled only 4,641 tons per year.Footnote 97 In 1966, 12–13 tons of “first choice” tender zebu meat (fillets and ribs) were shipped monthly to France by Air France and Air Madagascar and distributed through the enormous public abattoir at La Villette to local restaurants and purveyors.Footnote 98 French consumers remarked that zebu flesh was “particularly tasty,” and newspapers in Madagascar proclaimed the arrival of “zebu on Parisian tables!”Footnote 99 However, these exchanges were largely symbolic gestures to revivify tenuous Franco-Malgache bonds through the circulation of zebu beef. The sheer shipping distance to the metropole proved too costly, and thus secondary French markets, especially in La Réunion and Djibouti (then French Somaliland), were proportionately larger markets for zebu beef, especially of offal and tougher cuts for braising. Zambia and Madagascar brokered a pilot program to import some 2,000 tons of zebu meat in 1968; beef already accounted for 15 percent of Zambia’s imports owing to the prevalence of epizootics that compromised herds across East Africa.Footnote 100

The Demise of Madagascar’s Meat Exportation, 1968–1975

While Malagasy exporters sought out new global markets for zebu beef, they faced stiff competition from better established exporters in Latin America and Australia. Even so, newspapers proclaimed the status of Madagascar as among “one of the five largest beef exporters in Africa” and celebrated the circulation of the island’s beloved zebu to far-reaching locales.Footnote 101 Madagascar’s chief veterinarian for the Ministry of Agriculture attributed the early success of Malagasy meat exports to the cattle’s exceptional “natural immunity,” which allowed large herds to thrive despite ecological changes and frequent drought in the south.Footnote 102 Years later, French diplomats observed that Madagascar was the only African country able to deliver fresh or frozen meat to European countries because it was less susceptible to cattle plagues.Footnote 103

While it was true that Madagascar had been buffered from rinderpest outbreaks that plagued much of southern and eastern Africa in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, other bacteria marched across the island and infected the zebu. Footnote 104 Anthrax had long been present in Madagascar but was largely under control by the 1960s and 1970s thanks to sweeping vaccination campaigns.Footnote 105 Bovine pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) had plagued the island since at least the early 1900s (and likely earlier), and by the late 1950s and 1960s rates of infection were as high as 27–52 percent.Footnote 106 In fact, intensive breeding and cattle fattening schemes seem to have played a role in spreading TB among Malagasy herds. Veterinary scientists in the early 1970s conferred that the rates of infection were much higher in intensively farmed cattle, while the extensive farming techniques historically employed by most Malagasy pastoralists resulted in far lower rates.Footnote 107 In the absence of reliable TB tests, scientists in experimental cattle feeding schemes proposed “eliminating” infected zebu to mitigate economic losses, but by the mid-1970s those control measures dissipated.Footnote 108 In the decades that followed, bovine TB persisted as the most prevalent cattle disease causing further public health harm when it spread to human communities.

Perhaps the most worrisome and detrimental epizootic in the 1970s, however, was blackleg, caused by the Clostridium chauvoei bacterium. It was first identified on the island in August 1969, although earlier cases were suspected. Pastoralists in the southern region of Betroka, north of Fort Dauphin (see Map 1), first noticed rapidly-developing lesions and lameness among their herds in 1969, and within three months more than fifty thousand zebu died of the disease.Footnote 109 In a direct hit on exportation prospects, the mortality rates among calves was 40–50 percent.Footnote 110 By October, the epidemic had spread west to the Tulear region, where it reportedly devastated herds at a rate “of five to six fatalities per hour,” apparently leading some cattle owners to commit suicide in the face of their calamitous losses.Footnote 111 Adding insult to injury, the state continued exacting onerous cattle taxes inherited from colonial times, which fueled rancor among dispirited cattle rangers toward the national government.

If the blackleg epizootic revealed the life-seizing capacities of zebu for human communities, the microscopic Clostridium chauvoei exposed the fragility of national unity in the burgeoning republic. Political elites interpreted the epizootic event as not only a crisis for economic growth but also an attack on Malagasy’s growing economic autonomy. Newspaper accounts reported President Tsiranana’s hypothesis that the epizootic was “economic sabotage” at precisely the moment when the “rational valorizing of the Malagasy bovine herd” was leading to growing appreciation for its gastronomic virtues in Africa, Europe, and Asia.Footnote 112 Although Tsiranana did not specify any perpetrators by name, he cautioned pastoralists to be vigilant “against the maneuvers of those who, nostalgic for a bygone era, want to compromise the national economy by all means.”Footnote 113 His cryptic statement signaled the range of emergent adversaries that threatened to fray the tenuous ties of the budding nation-state—from longstanding French industrialists losing their former monopoly on the cattle industry, to radical Marxist-oriented factions within the PSD, to the rising nationalist party MONIMA (“Madagascar for the Malagasy”) in the south, the area hardest hit by blackleg.

No sooner did cattle farmers recover their herds from blackleg than they suffered a prolonged drought in 1970–1971.Footnote 114 It primarily devastated the deep south, historically an arid region with fewer pastoralists and lower cattle populations, and also impacted regions around the coastal cities of Tulear and Morondava.Footnote 115 It is difficult to gauge the lasting effects on cattle farmers of the drought, and the floods and back-to-back cyclones Eliane and Geneviève of 1970, since estimates of cattle population vary. Some evidence indicates steady populations of around two hundred thousand through the early 1970s, while other records produced after the drought suggest forty thousand were lost.Footnote 116 At any rate, rural communities aligned with MONIMA agitated forcefully against state elites and violently attacked officials in Morondava and Tulear, resulting in hundreds of deaths. PSD officials rapidly and brutally suppressed that revolt.Footnote 117

His health failing, Tsiranana could no longer hold together the disparate ideological impulses within the PSD, nor could he fully appeal to the wide-ranging demands of fervent nationalists, undisciplined student and labor activists, and resentful peasants on the ground. Within the PSD, internal tensions mounted among Malagasy political thinkers concerning the ideal form of “Malagasy socialism,” the role of peasant communities in driving forward economic self-reliance, and the broader prospects for an independent Madagascar. While Tsiranana’s regime anchored power in centralized leadership, the party’s leftists increasingly advocated for a transfer of power to the network of fokon`olona (communal institutions resembling village deliberative assemblies), which would serve as the primary units of socialist transformation.Footnote 118 Such debates increasingly undermined Tsiranana’s attempts to unify the political elites and eventually gave rise to mistrust within his regime, frustration with lagging improvement in most Malagasies’ daily lives, and suspicion among the broader publics. In retrospect, the MONIMA revolt tore asunder the country’s political fabric and opened imaginative space for urban students to lead their revolutionary movement in 1972, which ended Tsiranana’s rule and inaugurated a new socialist era.

Although Tsiranana’s successors tried to push forward cattle modernization schemes in the mid-1970s, by 1975 the trade in zebu beef had fallen rapidly to 61,173 carcasses, less than half its export volume in 1972 (152,500).Footnote 119 French technocrats blamed the fall on the abolition of the cattle tax in 1972, which they surmised had previously motivated cattle owners to sell stock, and also the general decline in national commerce which meant there were fewer commodities for which owners might liquidate their cattle into cash.Footnote 120 Yet throughout the mid-1970s, the European Economic Community blocked or sharply curtailed Malagasy imports to the former metropole and Reunion in order to protect domestic beef producers and owing to rising concerns about sanitary conditions of meat imports. In the years that followed, increasingly rigid standards for meat imports further marginalized Madagascar’s struggling producers from global chains of consumption.Footnote 121 Global demand for zebu beef began to decline, transportation costs surged, and the threat of interruptions to refrigeration across the island and overseas further strained the export economy.Footnote 122 Markets were oriented around local and regional geographies, in which cattle owners in the hinterlands walked their animals to the nearest cities for slaughter and sale to butchers on journeys stretching to several weeks. By the time the global oil crisis of 1973 struck, Malagasy zebu exports were already in steep decline.

At the heart of these stalled projects were cattle farmers who rejected the intensive fattening methods imported from Europe, preferring to instead allow their herds to “wander on all grassy plateaus.”Footnote 123 Even more, they refused their expected role as “partners” in an uneven political field dominated by Malagasy elites and officials. Enterprising cattle industrialists in Madagascar found pastoralists uninterested in selling their zebu, which French technocrats blamed on “attachment of Malagasy to the customs of the ancestors” and the “integration of cattle into ancestral patrimony.”Footnote 124 They disdainfully attributed pastoralists refusal to intensively raise their cattle to their “social function” in lifecycle rituals, the “prestige” cattle conferred on their owners, and the labor they provided for rice cultivation.Footnote 125 In this way, the story of cattle commodification appears to conform to abundant literatures on the problems that cattle and peoples’ ties to cattle posed to capitalist, beef production economies in Africa, what James Ferguson called the “bovine mystique.”Footnote 126 M. J. Herskovits first legitimated such dichotomous notions in the 1920s—of pastoralists as adhering to romanticized, premodern traditions in the face of modernity’s predations or to “stubborn conservativism” and obstructing the possibilities “cow power” offered rural advancement.Footnote 127 Such caricatures have persisted in scholarship and have also powerfully shaped development projects across the continent.

Indeed, French observers were quick to turn to “culture” as an explanatory framework for pastoralist disinterest in developmentalist projects, one that supplanted serious inquiry into the residual economic failures of French projects stemming from colonial times. It is striking how technical reports, authored by French technocrats involved in cattle development projects, so rarely mention the extensive, dogged but ultimately doomed colonial efforts to maximize Madagascar’s meat economy over the first half of the twentieth century.Footnote 128 Further, colonial authorities in Africa rarely referred to the histories of austere investments in infrastructures—what Josh Grace calls “minimal technopolitics.”Footnote 129 Perhaps acknowledgment of the scarce, colonial-era built infrastructures for cattle commodification would have forced French experts and diplomats to reckon uncomfortably with the economic and political failures that came before, and which they might be unwittingly reproducing. French explanations for pastoralist resistance that hinged on “cultural attachment” portrayed pastoralists as stubborn traditionalists possessing resolutely staid ideas. Such characterizations glossed over cattle owners’ complex economic calculations and dynamic sensibilities as they gauged market fluctuations, and also the ways cattle-centered practices had shifted over time.

While French accounts of pastoralist practices demand healthy skepticism, cattle have long been cultural touchstones and laboring companions in Malagasy communal, political, and economic life.Footnote 130 Their role has not been static, however. For instance, the value of cattle as walking historical repositories of family lineages and patrilineal property claims shifted considerably across the twentieth century. In the early 1920s and 1930s, French ethnologists recorded in great detail the symbolic ear markings owners made on cattle, which they described as owners attempts to mark and protect their property in the face of ever-present threats from cattle thieves. Ear markings also served as semiotic records of lineages’ variably “paternal … or maternal succession” (depending on their relative status) and of the owner’s kinship clan, and they employed a “very precise nomenclature … terms unused in other cases.”Footnote 131 By the 1930s, though, younger cattle owners were dispensing with marking traditions, for reasons that are unclear, though some Mahafaly and Antandroy communities in the south guarded the “marks of our ancestors.”Footnote 132 Also changing across time, depending on the economic conditions at hand, were pastoralist strategies around cattle accumulation and cattle raiding, which signified a “long-term, unbalanced, and delayed exchange” through which zebu were constantly circulating.Footnote 133 Their calculations about when to slaughter, breed, fatten, and raid were informed by their knowledge of dynamically shifting temporality, seasonality, and risk factors. Thus, while cattle held durable meanings and plural values—as a movable form of wealth, an index of status and prestige, and animate threads between the living and their dead ancestors—the specific strategies of cattle owners shifted across time.

If we follow cattle and their owners across the multiple spaces of commodification—beyond the marketplace and into the pasture and the abattoir—it becomes clear that pastoralists’ autonomy, coupled with their knowledge-based investments in particular breeding and slaughter practices, were important factors in their calculated involvement with cattle development projects. Well into the 1970s, cattle farmers privileged accompanying their zebu across the traversals to towns, to the abattoir, and up to the moment of their deaths. These practices collided with the segregation of people from their zebu that characterized the spatial arrangements of livestock infrastructures: refrigerated trucks, intensive and concentrated feedlots, and slaughterhouses. Especially in the newly built abattoirs, there was a clash between pastoralists sensibilities and those of technical experts regarding how cattle ought to be slaughtered. Since their inception in the nineteenth century, modern abattoirs had served as infrastructures of invisibility, concealing the bloody reality of how livestock were killed.Footnote 134 In French historical contexts, standardizing modern abattoirs and the fluctuations of animate life were tightly linked to ideas about commodification, civilization, and the “civilizing mission.”Footnote 135

Modern refrigerated abattoirs in Madagascar displayed such orientations of exclusion and even secrecy, and pastoralists pushed back on these rigid boundaries and sought to shape conditions of animal slaughter. Abattage of cattle was historically a profoundly social undertaking involving large gatherings and elaborate, extended feasting that brought together generations. Even in transactional exchanges when pastoralists sold their zebu, and live animals moved to edible beef, cattle owners in northwest Madagascar preferred to remain alongside their livestock, witnessing their passage from life to death.Footnote 136 For some owners, such witnessing may have provided reassurance that they recuperated the cattle’s full value at slaughter, but ethical and affective considerations may have also played a role.Footnote 137 Cattle owners in the northwest, a region historically marked by the blending of Islamic and ancestral practices, seem to have also “demand[ed] to be present during the slaughter of their animals.”Footnote 138 To be clear, butchers in that region followed general Islamic norms associated with slaughter to appeal to sizeable Muslim consumer markets locally, rather than produce halal meat for exportation. Still, their presence shaped the temporalities of public slaughterhouses by interrupting the flow of blood on the assembly line to “wait for the owner,” and prolonging individual slaughters (to at least fifteen minutes) to comply with Islamic norms. Echoing earlier racist explanations of so-called irrational Malagasy cattle practices, French veterinary experts’ instrumentalized discourses of “anarchic” Malagasy slaughterhouses marked by “undisciplined” slaughtering practices as the grounds for their exclusion from the global meat market.Footnote 139

Conclusion

Madagascar’s rise as a beef exporter in global markets proved to be short-lived and the island never matched powerhouse exporters like Brazil and Argentina. By the early 1970s, the country’s prospects for exportation were eclipsed by intersecting contingencies including changing consumer demands, logistical challenges of transportation, cold storage and packaging, and pastoralist reluctance to follow the normative practices dictated by private-public cattle development projects. On top of all this were increasingly turbulent domestic politics. Eventually tensions around lingering ties to French commercial and political interests mounted and in 1972 popular unrest unseated Tsiranana’s government, unhinging French trappings and driving the country into a tumultuous period before the rise of President Didier Ratsiraka (1975–1993). Ratsiraka pushed a more Marxist-Leninist inflected Malagasy socialism and allied with staunchly communist states (the USSR, China, and North Korea). Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the island’s population would experience widening inequalities and increased tensions under Ratsiraka’s leadership, but peasants continued to be characterized as the primary agents of development. In Ratsiraka’s words, they were “the motor force of revolution,” tasked with pulling the country from the depths of dependence on foreign imports and aid, even amidst the convulsions of global economic decline and the island’s increasing marginalization from global nodes of capital.Footnote 140 By the 1980s, Ratsiraka’s regime broadened their ties with a range of international allies, scientists, and investors, and livestock developmentalist projects continued to be important to broader plans for modernizing the nation.

Madagascar’s zebu story highlights the need to critically decenter narratives of cattle commodification anchored in North America and Europe and shows how cattle meat was forged and circulated in alternative geographies left in the shadows of scholarship on livestock economies. Far from inhabiting an isolated “world apart,” the bodies of Malagasy zebu were sites of global intermingling through crossbreeding experiments that infused zebu with their far-flung kin breeds in France, Texas, and South Africa. This article has shown how, rather than being bound for the former French metropole, zebu beef traveled from Malagasy pastures and slaughterhouses to Reunionese palates, Japanese grocery stores, Zambian marketplaces, and Parisian tables, thus offering a fuller understanding of meat commodity flows in the twentieth century. For a moment, an emergent, vast network of animal and human life opened possibilities for Malagasy elites to defy old, colonial-era extractive patterns that funneled ecological abundance to the metropole and Europe. Still, nascent threads of economic cooperation with new partners were coupled with the persistent presence of French technocrats and investors, who sought to preserve their scope of influence in an increasingly crowded post-colonial geopolitical field. As became even clearer in the 1970s and 1980s, by cultivating an export-oriented agricultural economy Malagasy elites left the island more vulnerable to devastating economic and environmental shocks.

When compared with Brazil, the world’s largest beef exporter, it is tempting to gloss Madagascar’s cattle development experiment as a “failure,” as French technocrats did. The story narrated here is very much a story of Madagascar’s developmentalist path; characterizations of the big island as “a world apart” seem to suggest it cannot be generalized. Indeed, the island’s sheer geography and topographical specificities presented unique logistical constraints on joining the transnational meat economy. However, casting Madagascar’s case as exceptional overlooks how elite officials’ utopian visions of economic emancipation through a booming cattle assemblage—bringing massive herds from pasture to abattoirs to plates of hungry consumers—collided with the constraints of intensified capitalism faced by postcolonial nation-states across Africa and Asia.Footnote 141 Madagascar shared with other African and Asian countries an inheritance of colonial legacies of economic domination, and like their counterparts, their emergent modernization schemes began to materialize just at the point when the new global capitalist order accelerated wealth accumulation in the United States and Europe.Footnote 142

Recounting a story of Madagascar’s decolonization through cattle allows us to glimpse how visionary projects of nation-building hinged on remaking humans, zebu, and human-zebu encounters. Centering animals in broader processes of development opens up insights into how animals have shaped the conditions of possibility for human life, through their physical attributes, varying degrees of bodily, genetic, and behavioral plasticity, and specific practices of consumption and waste production. Owing to their sheer weight, fecundity, slow mobility, and ability to be bred and expanded for more body mass for butchery, zebu were well-positioned to be taken up and enlisted in overlapping arenas—as crucial agents in ancestor-centered cosmologies and ambitious nation-making processes. Yet harnessing their capacity to be converted into commodities required transforming local ecologies, suppressing trans-generational husbandry knowledge, and making peasants and pastoralists into the forceful “motors of the revolution.” Some of the threads of zebu-human relationships persisted across time from colonial through socialist regimes, while others emerged anew. In post-colonial Madagascar, peasants and cattle were intensively brought together in new spatial reorganizations to support capitalist-driven, developmentalist change, and these entanglements were interwoven with discourses of ancestors, ancestral land, and distinctive, fresh expressions of “Malagasy socialism.”

Madagascar’s emergent meat export economy pulled together various actors—pastoralists and butchers, Malagasy government officials, technical and scientific experts, and foreign diplomats and investors—in ever-shifting networks of knowledge production and economic exchange. In challenging cattle modernization schemes, zebu farmers critiqued the conditions of knowledge production and economic exchange set forth by elites in the era of fresh independence. Even if cattle owners’ repugnance for developmental projects fell short of fully articulated decolonial visions, their refutations contained the imaginative seeds for a different kind of decoloniality rooted in demands for a share of the fruits of independence. Seizing encounters around modernization, pastoralists defined themselves as co-producers of bovine life, both outside of and within the crevices of the industrial capitalist infrastructures of abattoirs and feedlots. They contested not only the exchange value of beef and their involvement in international beef trade as a vehicle for integration into the Malagasy body politic, but the very conditions in which cattle, and ultimately humans, should thrive and perish.

Acknowledgments

The research for this article was made possible by the generous support of a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship (FEL-273525) and the Britton Family Dean’s Faculty Fellowship, Vanderbilt University. For thoughtful comments on earlier drafts, I thank Genese Sodikoff, Laura Ann Twagira, and the participants in the 2022 Livestock as Global and Imperial Commodities, Commodities of Empire International Workshop at Free University, Berlin. I am deeply grateful to Samuël Coghe (organizer of aforementioned workshop) for his encouragement and incisive commentary, and Sam Dolbee, Brian Ikaika Klein, the anonymous CSSH reviewers, and David Akin for their generous engagement with this article. All translations from French and Malagasy are my own.

References

1 “Ferme d’État Omby, Levée d’Angady dans l’Ouest?” Madagascar Matin, 21 June 1972.

2 Archives Diplomatiques, Nantes France (AD) 674PO/1/374-376, Report “Les Abattoirs Industriels a Madagascar,” 12 Nov. 1970.

3 “La <<conquest de l’Ouest>> de la Ferme d’État Omby se heurte au mécontentement des paysans de Tsiro,” Courrier de Madagascar, 27 June 1972.

4 Ibid.

5 Ibid.

6 Vazaha is a term denoting foreigners or strangers, especially white Europeans and North Americans.

7 Thompson, E. P., “Time, Work-Discpline, and Industrial Capitalism,” Past & Present 38 (1967): 5697, 85CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

8 Dubois, H., “Monographie des Betsileo [Monograph of Betsileo],” Travaux et Mémoires de l’Institut d’Ethnol-ogie XXXIV (Paris: Musée de l’Homme. 1938)Google Scholar.

9 Here and throughout, my use of “decolonization” follows from recent scholarship which conceptualizes decolonization as an imaginative and transformative political project and an era, “a contingent moment of political independence and a long-standing process with deep roots.” Lee, Christopher, “Introduction,” in Lee, Christopher J., ed., Making a World after Empire: The Bandung Moment and Its Political Afterlives (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2019), 142, 5Google Scholar; James, Leslie and Leake, Elisabeth, “Introduction,” in James, L. and Leake, E., eds., Decolonization and the Cold War: Negotiating Independence (London: Bloomsbury, 2015), 118 Google Scholar.

10 Runcie, Sarah, “From Malaria Eradication to Basic Health Services: Decolonization and Public Health Futures in 1960s Cameroon,” International Journal of African Historical Studies 53, 1 (2020): 2745 Google Scholar; Osseo-Asare, Abena Dove, Atomic Junction: Nuclear Power in Africa after Independence (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bamba, Abou, African Miracle, African Mirage: Transnational Politics and the Paradox of Modernization in Ivory Coast (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2016)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sackeyfio-Lenoch, Naarborko, “Decolonization, Development, and Nation Building in Ghana-Asia relations, 1957–1966,” International Journal of African Historical Studies 49, 2 (2016): 235–53Google Scholar.

11 Hecht, Gabrielle, “Rupture-Talk in the Nuclear Age: Conjugating Colonial Power in Africa,” Social Studies of Science 32, 5–6 (2002): 691727 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Cooper, Frederick, “Modernizing Bureaucrats, Backward Africans, and the Development Concept,” in Cooper, Frederick and Packard, Randall, eds., International Development and the Social Sciences: Essays on the History and Politics of Knowledge (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997), 6492 Google Scholar.

12 Hecht, Gabrielle, “Introduction,” in Hecht, G., ed., Entangled Geographies: Empire and Technopolitics in the Global Cold War (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2011), 112, 6CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

13 The literature on modernization is voluminous. See, for instance, Miescher, Stephan, A Dam for Africa: Akosombo Stories from Ghana (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2022)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bloom, Peter J., Miescher, Stephan F., and Manuh, Takyiwaa, eds., Modernization as Spectacle in Africa (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2014)Google Scholar; Isaacman, Allen and Isaacman, Barbara, Dams, Displacement, and the Delusion of Development (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2013)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Mitchell, Timothy, Rule of Experts: Egypt, Techno-Politics, and Modernity (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Scott, James, Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999)Google Scholar.

14 Hecht, Gabrielle, “Hopes for the Radiated Body: Uranium Miners and Transnational Technopolitics in Namibia,” Journal of African History 51 (2010): 213–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

15 Cooper, Frederick, “Development, Modernization and the Social Sciences in the Era of Decolonization,” Revue d’Histoire des Sciences Humaines 10 (2004): 938, 33CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

16 Hecht, G., ed., Entangled Geographies: Empire and Technopolitics in the Global Cold War (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2011), 5CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

17 Wang, Jessica, Mad Dogs and other New Yorkers: Rabies, Medicine, and Society in an American Metropolis, 1840–1920 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2019)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Specht, Joshua, Red Meat Republic: A Hoof-to-Table History of How Beef Changed America (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2019)Google Scholar; Robichaud, Andrew, Animal City: The Domestication of America (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2019)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Blanchette, Alex, Porkopolis: American Animality, Standardized Life, and the Factory Farm (Durham: Duke University Press, 2020)Google Scholar; Fleischman, Thomas, Communist Pigs: An Animal History of East Germany’s Rise and Fall (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2020)Google Scholar; Woods, Rebecca, The Herds Shot Round the World: Native Breeds and the British Empire, 1800–1900 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2017)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Horowitz, Roger, Putting Meat on the American Table: Taste, Technology, Transformation (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006)Google Scholar; Skaggs, Jimmy, Prime Cut: Livestock Raising and Meatpacking in the United States, 1607–1983 (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 2000)Google Scholar; Cronon, William, Nature’s Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West (New York: Norton, 1991)Google Scholar.

18 An emergent, vibrant cluster of animal histories in Africa, mostly focused on the colonial period, includes Aderinto, Saheed, Animality and Colonial Subjecthood in Africa: The Human and Nonhuman Creatures of Nigeria (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2022)Google Scholar; Conz, Christopher, “Sheep, Scab Mites, and Society: The Process and Politics of Veterinary Knowledge in Lesotho, Southern Africa, c. 1900–1933,” Environment and History 26, 3 (2020): 383412 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Dlamini, Jacob, Safari Nation: A Social History of the Kruger National Park (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2020)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Jacobs, Nancy, Birders of Africa (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2016)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Mikhail, Alan, The Animal in Ottoman Egypt (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sunseri, Thaddeus, “A Political Ecology of Beef in Colonial Tanzania and the Global Periphery, 1864–1961,” Journal of Historical Geography 39 (2013): 2942 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Swart, Sandra, Riding High: Horses, Humans, and History in South Africa (Johannesburg: Wits University Press, 2010)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

19 Lopes, Maria-Aparecida, Rio de Janeiro in the Global Meat Market, c. 1860 to c. 1930 (London: Routledge, 2021)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Wilcox, Robert, Cattle in the Backlands: Mato Grosso and the Evolution of Ranching in the Brazilian Tropics (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2017)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Woods, Rebecca, “From Colonial Animal to Imperial Edible: Building an Empire of Sheep in New Zealand, ca. 1880–1900,” Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 35, 1 (2015): 119–22CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Cold storage can also be understood as part of “thermal colonialization,” in which the production of idealized environments is driven by settler colonial desire; see Hobart, Hi’ilei, Cooling the Tropics: Ice, Indigeneity, and Hawaiian Refreshment (Durham: Duke University Press, 2023)Google Scholar.

20 Some exceptions include Tatsuya Mitsuda, “From Colonial Hoof to Metropolitan Table: The Imperial Biopolitics of Beef Provisioning in Colonial Korea,” Global Food History (2023), https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/20549547.2022.2159708?scroll=top&needAccess=true&role=tab&aria-labelledby=full-article; DOI: 10.1080/20549547.2022.2159708; and Sunseri, Thaddeus, “International Beef Packing in the Age of Empire: LEMCO in South West Africa, 1906–c. 1940,” South African Historical Journal 73, 3 (2021): 573600 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

21 The scope of this article is on fresh and frozen meat circulation and (briefly) on hides, but canned meat was also important to Madagascar’s export meat industry in the colonial and early postcolonial periods. See Fanjaharivola Rakotomaharo, “Historique et Actualite de l’Exportation de Viande Bovine à Madagascar,” Thesis, Université d’Antananarivo, Ecole Superieure des Sciences Agronomiques, 1993; and Samuël Coghe’s book in preparation, “Commodifying Cattle. Transforming Livestock Economies and Knowledge Regimes in Colonial Madagascar, 1890–1960.”

22 FAO statistics, 2022, https://www.fao.org/faostat/en/#search/cattle%20%2B%20madagascar (accessed 16 July 2022).

23 See https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SP.POP.TOTL?locations=MG (accessed 25 July 2022). These figures are aggregate statistics based on figures provided by the United Nations Population Division; country census reports; Eurostat; United Nations Statistical Division; and the U.S. Census Bureau: International Database.

24 Monaville, Pedro, Students of the World: Global 1968 and Decolonization in the Congo (Durham: Duke University Press, 2022)Google Scholar; Benjamin Siegel, “The Kibbutz and the Ashram: Sarvodaya Agriculture, Israeli Aid, and the Global Imaginaries of Indian Development,” American Historical Review 125, 4 (2020): 1175-204; Getachew, Adom, Worldmaking after Empire: The Rise and Fall of Self-Determination (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2019)Google Scholar; Sherman, Taylor, “‘A New Type of Revolution’: Socialist Thought in India, 1940s–1960s,” Postcolonial Studies 21, 4 (2018): 485504 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Ahlman, Jeffrey, Living with Nkrumahism: Nation, State and Pan-Africanism in Ghana (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2017)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Lee, Christopher J., ed., Making a World after Empire: The Bandung Moment and Its Political Afterlives (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2010)Google Scholar.

25 On the periodization of development, see Hodge, Joseph, Hödl, Gerald, and Kopf, Martina, eds., Developing Africa: Concepts and Practices in Twentieth-Century Colonialism (Manchester: Manchester University Press 2014)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bonneuil, Christophe, “Development as Experiment: Science and State Building in Late Colonial and Postcolonial Africa, 1930–1970,” Osiris 15 (2000): 258–81, 259CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Cooper and Packard, International Development. On the role of experts, see Pretel, David and Camprubí, Lino, eds., Technology and Globalisation: Networks of Experts in World History (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Tilley, Helen, Africa as a Living Laboratory: Empire, Development, and the Problem of Scientific Knowledge, 1870–1950 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hecht, Entangled Geographies; Hodge, Joseph, Triumph of the Expert: Agrarian Doctrines of Development and the Legacies of British Colonialism (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2007)Google Scholar; Mitchell, Rule of Experts; and Bonneuil, “Development as Experiment.”

26 Fleischman, Communist Pigs; Saraivo, Tiago, Fascist Pigs: Technoscientific Organisms and the History of Fascism (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2018)Google Scholar; Suzuki, Yuka, The Nature of Whiteness: Race, Animals and Nation in Zimbabwe (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2017)Google Scholar.

27 Maan Barua, “Animal Work: Metabolic, Ecological, Affective,” Society for Cultural Anthropology, Editors’ Forum: Theorizing the Contemporary: Fieldsights, 26 July 2018, https://culanth.org/fieldsights/animal-work-metabolic-ecological-affective ; LeCain, Timothy, The Matter of History: How Things Create the Past (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), 147 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

28 “Cattle Ecologies and Economies in British Mandate Palestine,” paper presented at “Livestock as Global and Imperial Commodities: Economies, Ecologies and Knowledge Regimes, c. 1500–present,” Free University, Berlin, Germany, 14 July 2022.

29 “Technical diplomats” is offered by Pretel and Camprubi to describe technical experts as “agents of empire,” in “Technological Encounters: Locating Experts in the History of Globalisation,” in David Pretel and Lino Camprubí, eds., Technology and Globalisation: Networks of Experts in World History (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018), 7.

30 Boivin, Nicole, Crowther, Alison, Helm, Richard, and Fuller, Dorian, “East Africa and Madagascar in the Indian Ocean World,” Journal of World Prehistory 26 (2013): 213–81, 230–36CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Chantal Radimilahy, “Mahilaka: An Archaeological Investigation of an Early Town in Northwestern Madagascar,” PhD diss, Uppsala, 1998; Jessica Magnier, et al., “The Genetic History of Mayotte and Madagascar Cattle Breeds Mirrors the Complex Pattern of Human Exchanges in Western Indian Ocean,” G3 Genes/Genomes/Genetics 12, 4 (2022): 1, https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35137043/.

31 Kaufmann, Jeffrey and Tsirahamba, Sylvestre, “Forests and Thorns: Conditions of Change Affecting Mahafale Pastoralists in Southwestern Madagascar,” Conservation Sociology (2006): 231–61Google Scholar, cited in Hixon, Sean et al., “Late Holocene Spread of Pastoralism Coincides with Endemic Megafaunal Extinction on Madagascar,” Proceedings of the Royal Society B 288, 1955 (2021): 110 Google ScholarPubMed.

32 Railsback, L. Bruce et al., “Relationship between Climate Change, Human Environmental Impact, and Megafaunal Extinction Inferred from a 4000-year Multi-proxy Record from a Stalagmite from Northwestern Madagascar,” Quaternary Science Review 234 (2020): 114 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Voarintsoa, Ny Riavo et al., “Multiple Proxy Analyses of a U/Th-dated Stalagmite to Reconstruct Paleoenvironmental Changes in Northwestern Madagascar between 270 CE and 1300 CE,” Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 469, 1 (2017): 138–55CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

33 Louis Molet, “Le Boeuf dans la civilization Malgache” (Paris: ORSTOM, 1963). See also Campbell, Gwyn, “Commercialisation of Cattle in Imperial Madagascar, 1795–1905,” in Chaiklin, Martha, Gooding, Philip, and Campbell, Gwyn, eds., Animal Trade Histories in the Indian Ocean World (Palgrave: London, 2020), 181215, 189CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

34 Molet, Louis, “Le Boeuf dans l’Ankaizinana: Son importance sociale et économique,” Mémoires de l’Institut Scientifique de Madagascar, Serié C: Sciences Humanines 2 (1953), 1128, 1Google Scholar.

35 The practice of slaughtering many cattle for burial rituals, part of the elaborate funerary tradition known as manao afana in the highlands, waned in the late nineteenth century owing to the increasingly authoritarian Merina kingdom. Voluminous slaughter was gradually incorporated into ritual exhumations (famidihana). Larson, Pier M., “Austronesian Mortuary Ritual in History: Transformations of Secondary Burial (Famadihana) in Highland Madagascar,” Ethnohistory 48, 1–2 (2001): 123–55, 149CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.

36 Campbell, Gwyn, An Economic History of Imperial Madagascar, 1750–1895: The Rise and Fall of an Island Empire (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005)Google Scholar.

37 Campbell, “Commercialisation,” 188–99. Debates, still ongoing, abound about the relative abundance of cattle in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, owing to drought and ecological change. See ibid.; and Hooper, Jane, Feeding Globalization: Madagascar and the Provisioning Trade, 1600–1800 (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2017)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

38 Campbell, “Commercialisation,” 188–99. Beyond Madagascar, meat economies and infrastructures of provision linking North Africa to the Gulf of Aden were scaled up dramatically in the mid-to-late nineteenth century with European (especially British troops’) demands for livestock and salted and fresh meat. See Barak, On, Powering Empire: How Coal Made the Middle East and Sparked Global Carbonization (Oakland: University of California Press, 2020), 5565 Google Scholar.

39 Jean-Pierre Raison notes that Société Rochefortaise, which became one of the island’s most important cattle companies, established ranches in the pasture-rich region of the middle-west, which were maintained by migrant laborers on a sharecropping model to fatten and sell cattle (dabok’andro); “Immigration in the Sakay District, Madagascar,” ORSTOM Fonds Documentaire (1975), 200–3.

40 Kaufmann, Jeffrey, “La Question des Raketa: Colonial Struggles with Prickly Pear Cactus in Southern Madagascar, 1900–1923,” Ethnohistory 48 (2001): 87121 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and “The Non-modern Constitution of Famines in Madagascar’s Spiny Forests,” Environmental Sciences 5, 2 (2008): 73–89; Farroux, Emmanuel, “Les échanges marchands dans les societés pastorale de l’ensemble meridional de Madagascar,” Cahiers des sciences humaines 30, 1–2 (1994): 197–210, 201–2Google Scholar; Jean Fremigacci, “Insécurité, bandistisme, et criminalité dans le Nord de Madagascar au début du XXe siècle,” Omaly sy Anio 25–26 (1987): 297–320.

41 For instance, Guillermo, M., “Le Zébu de Madagascar,” Revue d’élevage et de médecine vétérinaire des pays tropicaux 3 (1949): 6175, 62CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

42 Serres, H. et al, “Le croisement Brahman à Madagascar,” Revue d’élevage et de médecine vétérinaire des pays tropicaux 21, 4 (1960): 519–61, 521CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

43 Colonial-era placenames were utilized until around 1975, when they were changed to reflect Malagasy language pronunciations more accurately. In many cases, however, colonial-era names are still utilized in common parlance. For these reasons, throughout this paper I retain the colonial-era names with contemporary names in brackets where applicable, thus Tananarive [Antananarivo], Majunga [Mahajanga], Tamatave [Toamasina], and so forth.

44 Marcel Lacrouts et al., Etudes des problemes poses par l’elevage et la commercialisation du betail et de la viande a Madagascar, Ministere de la Coopération, Gouvernment de France, vols. 1–2 (1962), 28–32.

45 Samuël Coghe, “Creating the Renitelo: Cattle Breeding and Veterinary Science in Late Colonial and Early Postcolonial Madagascar.” I am grateful to the author for sharing this unpublished manuscript.

46 Serres et al., “Le croisement.” Note, however, that canning factories were also constructed during postcolonial times; see “Tsiranana inaugurates a conserverie,” Le Courrier, 18 Sept. 1965.

47 Chirikure, Shadreck, “The Metalworker, the Potter, and the Pre-European African ‘Laboratory,’” in Mavhunga, Clapperton Chakanetsa, ed., What Do Science, Technology, and Innovation Mean from Africa? (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2017), 6377 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Chakanetsa Mavhunga, “Introduction: What Do Science, Technology, and Innovation Mean from Africa,?” in What Do Science, Technology, and Innovation Mean from Africa? (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2017), 1–27;  Mavhunga, Chakanetsa, Transient Workspaces: Technologies of Everyday Innovation in Zimbabwe (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2014.)CrossRefGoogle Scholar

48 Gilibert, J., “Une nouvelle race bovine: le Renitelo,” Revue d’élevage et de médecine vétérinaire des pays tropicaux 27, 1 (1974): 537 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.

49 Lalanne, A., Metzger, Georges, and Hamon, J. L., “L’amélioration du zébu malgache: création d’une race à viande par métissage,” Revue d’élevage et de médecine vétérinaire des pays tropicaux 11, 2 (1958): 191–213, 196–97CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Gilibert, “Une nouvelle race.”

50 Gilibert, “Une nouvelle race,” 7.

51 Coghe, “Creating the Renitelo.”

52 Gilibert, “Une nouvelle race,” 28.

53 AD 673PO/1/261, secret letter from Henri Gauthier, Chargé d’Affaires de France to M. Couve de Murville, Ministere des Affaires Etrangeres, “Commercialization of Meat,” 7 Apr. 1965. In the 1970s, Malagasy cattle owners in the northwest reported to French researchers that Texas Brahmans were unappealing because they lacked horns, were overly aggressive (often chasing people), and rarely bellowed. Pastoralists were “proud to hear this bellowing” and sought sonorous zebu. See Cori, Gilles and Trama, Pierre, Types d’Elevage et de Vie Rurale à Madagascar (Paris: Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 1979), 181 Google Scholar.

54 In institutional terms, the PSD joined the Socialist International in 1961. On Malagasy socialism as a developmentalist ideology, see Raison-Jourde, Françoise and Roy, Gérard, Paysans, intellectuals, et populisme à Madagascar (Paris: Karthala, 2010), 88 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

55 Raison-Jourde, Françoise, “Les mots du socialism pour changer Madagascar: les impasses du minister Resampa,” in Blum, Françoise et al., eds., Socialismes en Afrique (Paris: Éditions de la Maison des sciences de l’homme, 2021), 85106 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

56 Lal, Priya, African Socialism in Postcolonial Tanzania: Between the Village and the World (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; McGovern, Michael, Unmasking the State: Making Guinea Modern (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012), 125 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Pitcher, M. Anne and Askew, Kelly, “ African Socialisms and Postsocialisms,” Africa 76, 1 (2006): 114 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Cooper, Frederick, Africa since 1940: The Past of the Present (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), 89 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

57 Archives Diplomatiques, Nantes (herein AD) 673PO/1/230, quoted by Alfred Ramangasoavina, Garde des Sceaux, Ministre de la Justice, in conference, “Malagasy Socialism and Development,” 3 May 1962, Mahamasina stadium.

58 Ibid.

59 Blum et al., Socialismes en Afrique; Priya Lal, African Socialism.

60 Ibid.

61 The Socialist Charter of the Malagasy Nation (known as the boky mena) described it this way: “The great powers in the year 2000 will be countries capable of feeding their inhabitants first, and exporting foodstuffs to other nations, secondly.… It is scandalous that we, one of the rice-producing countries, possessing an immense agricultural potential, was obliged to import for all these years an enormous quantity of rice, resulting in a hemorrhage of foreign currency that could have been used to buy the equipment needed for our development and industrialization” (p. 56).

62 Rapport sur le developpement de Madagascar, Malagasy Republic (Tananarive: Le Commissariat, 1962), 21.

63 Scott, Seeing Like a State; McGovern, Mike, A Socialist Peace? Explaining the Absence of War in an African Country (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2017), 45 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Lal, African Socialism, 9; Straker, Jay, Youth, Nationalism, and the Guinean Revolution (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1990)Google Scholar; O’Laughlin, Bridget, “Through a Divided Glass: Dualism, Class and the Agrarian Question in Mozambique,” Journal of Peasant Studies 23, 4 (1996): 139 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Discourses of the “backward peasant” had their roots in colonial developmentalist discourses; Cooper “Modernizing Bureaucrats,” 69–72; and Lal, African Socialism, 137.

64 AD 673PO/1/230, “Reflexions sur le programme economique et les journees malgache au developppement,” 1962 (exact date illegible).

65 AD 673PO/1/230, quoted by Alfred Ramangasoavina, Garde des Sceaux, Ministre de la Justice, in the conference “Malagasy Socialism and Development,” 3 May 1962, Mahamasina stadium; “Notes on the Synthesis of the Journée Malgaches du Developpement,” 5 May 1962.

66 “President Tsiranana parle du socialisme Malgache,” Lumiere, 4 June 1967.

67 Tsiranana quoted in Philippe Lefebvre, “Madagascar: Une grande île en dehors des orthodoxies de l’Afrique,” La Cité: Revue de la Cité de Paris, 1 Jan. 1965: 22.

68 Lal, African Socialism, 9; Scott, Seeing Like a State.

69 AD 673PO/1/261, secret letter from Henri Gauthier, Chargé d’Affaires de France to M. Couve de Murville, Ministere des Affaires Etrangeres, “Commercialization of Meat,” 7 Apr. 1965.

70 Gilibert, “Une nouvelle race”; Lacrouts et al., Etudes des problemes.

71 Lalanne, Metzger, and Hamon, “L’amélioration,” 191.

72 AD 674PO/1/488, Convention 24/C/60 relative à l’aide et la cooperation; AD 674PO/1/488, letter from Chef de la Mission Permanente d’Aide et de Coopération to Minister de la Cooperation, 15 Feb 1962. See also Raison-Jourde and Roy, Paysans.

73 AD 674PO/1/470, “Dix Ans de Recherche Agronomique,” J. Manambelona, Comité de la Recherche Scientifique et Technique, Republic de Madagascar, 5 Aug. 1960.

74 Gilibert, “Une nouvelle race.” Eventually it would become clear that the Renitelo held little appeal to the broader market of Malagasy cattle farmers and pastoralists, who preferred the zebu-American Brahman crossbreeds. Renitelo were mostly confined to state ranches and experimental agricultural centers. Coghe, “Creating the Renitelo.”

75 Lacrouts et al., Etudes des problemes, 112–14.

76 Ibid., 23.

77 Ibid., 42–44.

78 Characterizations of feasting as wasteful and detrimental to economic development by officials and technocrats is not unique to Madagascar. For a comparative case from the British Solomon Islands Protectorate, see David Akin, Colonialism, Maasina Rule, and the Origins of Malaitan Kastom (Honolulu: University of Hawai`i Press, 2013), 121–24.

79 Abinal, Antoine and Malzac, Victor, Dictionnaire Malgache-Français (Paris: Éditions Maritimes et d’Outre-Mer, 1963), 462–43Google Scholar.

80 On naming and pasturage, see Lasnet, M., “Notes d’Ethnologue et de Médecine sur les Sakalaves du Nord-Ouest,” Annales d’Hygiène et de médecine colonials 1 (1898–1899): 471–97, 475Google Scholar; and Ribot, J., “Les Comportements de l’eleveur et du zebu à Madagascar l’adaptation du role et des actions du service de l’elevage a ces comportements,” Terre Malgache. Tany Malagasy 21 (1982): 125–36, 127–29Google Scholar.

81 Danielli, Mary, “The ‘Mpanandro’ (Maker of Days) of Imerina, Madagascar,” Folklore 60, 4 (1949): 375–87CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Ritual experts were also charged with knowing how and when to take decisive, collection ritual action based on complex divinatory systems, which differed across the island.

82 Self-Devouring Growth: A Planetary Parable as Told from Southern Africa (Durham: Duke University Press, 2019), 5.

83 Marx observed the multifaceted dimensions of cattle as both draught animals and “circulating capital” through their fattening, slaughter, and material rendition into meat, as pointed out by Barua, Maan, in “Animating Capital: Work, Commodities, Circulation,” Progress in Human Geography 43, 4 (2019), 650–69, 661CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

84 Ribot, “Les Comportements,” 130.

85 On zebu immunity and hardiness, see Bradley, Daniel and Magee, David, “Genetics and the Origins of Domestic Cattle,” in Zeder, Melinda et al., eds., Documenting Domestication: New Genetic and Archaeological Paradigms (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2006), 317–28, 317Google Scholar.

86 AD 673PO/1/247, J. Carre, “La Productivite de l’herbe,” Institut de Recherches Agronomiques à Madagascar (1961).

87 Lacrouts et al., Etudes des problemes, 247–57.

88 Hecht, “Rupture-Talk”; Miescher, Stephan, “Building the City of the Future: Visions and Experiences of Modernity in Ghana’s Akosombo Township,” Journal of African History 53 (2012): 367–90CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Mains, Daniel, “Blackouts and Progress: Privatization, Infrastructure, and a Developmentalist State in Jimma, Ethiopia,” Cultural Anthropology 27, 1 (2012): 327 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Chalfin, Brenda, Neoliberal Frontiers: An Ethnography of Sovereignty in West Africa (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2010)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Larkin, Brian, Signal and Noise: Media, Infrastructure, and Urban Change in Nigeria (Durham: Duke University Press, 2008)Google Scholar; Scott, Seeing Like a State; Cooper and Packard, International Development. For infrastructure as a touchstone of socialist modernity, see Pederson, Morten, Not Quite Shamans: Spirit Worlds and Political Lives in Northern Mongolia (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2011)Google Scholar; and Dalakoglou, Dimitris, “The Road: An Ethnography of the Albanian-Greek Cross-Border Motorway,” American Ethnologist 37, 1 (2010): 132–49CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

89 Bamba, African Miracle; see also Runcie, Sarah, “Decolonizing ‘La Brousse’: Rural Medicine and Colonial Authority in Cameroon,” French Politics, Culture & Society 38, 2 (2020): 126–47CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

90 AD 673PO/1/259, “Viandes: K. Kawakami revient a la tete d’une delegation,” Madagascar Press, 3 Feb. 1970; “Viandes: Une Délégation privé Nippone en visite,” Le Courrier de Madagascar, 29 Oct. 1969.

91 AD 673PO/1/259, “Les Experts Japonais Satisfaits de Leur Sejour Dans le Sud,” 10 Apr. 1967.

92 AD 673/1/259, “Protocole d’Accord,” signed between Nissho Company and Mini Agr, 21 Aug. 1968; “L’Usine Fabriquer du Jus de Viande,” Le Courrier de Madagascar, 29 Jan. 1969; AD 673PO/1/261, “Synthese: Enterprises de Commercialisation et Industrialisation de la viande—MANIVACO,” 29 Jan. 1972.

93 AD 673PO/1/235, Note: “Activites Economiques Japonaises à Madagascar,” 19 Nov. 1969; AD 673PO/1/259, “Note: Usine de viande à Vohimasina,” Jan. 1969.

94 Lefebvre, “Madagascar,” 24.

95 “9 ranches aideront l’embouchure traditionnelle à fournir les bovins pour les abattoirs industriels de Tananarive et de Majunga,” Courrier de Madagascar, 17 Jan. 1968.

96 Although more research is needed to say for certain, evidence suggests that most of the cattle slaughtered were zebu rather than the aforementioned “three-breed race,” Renitelo. Cattle traders sometimes purchased Renitelo bulls, but most purchasers used them for traction in rice fields rather than as dairy cows, owing to their superior strength and stamina; AD 673PO/1/261, Secret letter from Henri Gauthier, Chargé d’Affaires de France to M. Couve de Murville, Ministere des Affaires Etrangeres, “Commercialization of Meat,” 7 Apr. 1965.

97 “Les exportations de viande et abats en nette progression,” Madagascar Presse, 15 Mar. 1966.

98 “Suivez le zebu! … il va maintenant sur les tables parisiennes,” Courrier de Madagascar, 5 Feb. 1966.

99 “Gastronimie malgache,” France-Aviation, 15 Feb. 1970; “Suivez le zebu! … il va maintenant sur les tables parisiennes,” Courrier de Madagascar, 5 Feb. 1966.

100 “Les promesses zambiennes seront tenues: premières viandes exportées en mars,” Le Courrier de Madagascar, 30 Jan. 1968.

101 “Madagascar Parmi les 5 Plus Gros Exportateurs Africains de Viande,” Le Courrier de Madagascar, 9 Mar. 1966. This figure is not substantiated by studies of international beef exportation.

102 Quoted in Le Courrier de Madagascar, 22 Mar. 1968.

103 AD 674PO/1/378, note on “Sur la reparation de quotas a l’exportation des viandes et conserves de viandes,” Apr. 1973.

104 Gwyn Campbell signals disease occurrence in an earlier period. East Coast Fever among Malagasy cattle in the late 1800s and early 1900s caused a steep decline in their live exportation to Natal, although hides were still in demand; “Disease, Cattle, and Slaves: The Development of Trade between Natal and Madagascar, 1875–1904,” African Economic History 19 (1990–1991): 105–33, 120–23.

105 Buck, G. and Courdurier, J., “Les zoonoses à Madagascar,” Revue d’Elevage et de Médecine Vétérinaire Pays Tropicaux 15, 2 (1962): 181–91, 187CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

106 Buck and Courdurier, “Les zoonoses à Madagascar,” 186.

107 Ribot, J., Blancou, J., and Razafindrakoto, D., “Les Tuberculoses des Animaux à Madagascar,” Terres Malgaches 13 (1972): 143–62, 150Google Scholar.

108 Serres, H., Mesissonnier, E., and Godet, G., “Embouche de Zébus malgaches: Essais complémentaires,” Revue d’Elevage Méd. Vet Pays Tropicales 25, 4 (1972): 551–68CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

109 Blancou, J. M., Rakotoarivelo, J., and Serres, H., “Note sur les premiers cas de charbon symptomatique à Madagascar,” Revue d’Elevage et de Médecine Vétérinaire Pays Tropicaux, 24, 1 (1971): 1921, 20CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.

110 AD 674PO/1/378, “Evolution de la Commercialisation dub Betail Dans la Province de Majunga,” n.d.

111 “Une Epidemie Tue 5 Boeufs a l’Heure Dans le Sud,” Le Courrier de Madagascar, 2 Oct. 1969.

112 Ibid.

113 Ibid., “…ceux qui contre les manoevres de tous ceux qui, nostalgiques d’un passé revolu, veulent compromettre par tous les moyens l’economie nationale.”

114 Under the exigencies of salvaging a now-imperiled beef exportation economy, and intensified political pressures, French and Malagasy scientists collaboratively developed a highly effective bivalent vaccination against both blackleg and anthrax, which was widely administered beginning in 1971. Blancou, Jean, “Étude d’un vaccin mixte contre le charbon bactéridien et le charbon symptomatique,” Revue d’Elevage et de Médecine Vétérinaire des Pays Tropicaux 27, 2 (1974): 183–87Google Scholar; Blancou, Jean et al., “Note sur les premiers cas de charbon symptomatique à Madagascar,” Revue d’Elevage et de Médecine Vétérinaire des Pays Tropicaux 24, 1 (1971): 1921 Google ScholarPubMed.

115 Luc Ferry, Yann l’Hote, and Anna Wesselink, “Les precipitations dans le Sud-ouest de Madagascar,” Water Resources Variability in Africa during the XXth Century, Proceedings of the Abidjan ’98 Conference of the International Association of Hydrological Sciences held at Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, Nov. 1998, 252 (1998): 89–96, 94; Donque, Gerald, “The Climatology of Madagascar,” in Battistini, R. and Richard-Vindard, G., eds., Biogeography and Ecology in Madagascar (Dordecht: Springer, 1972), 87144, 136CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Canavesio, Rémy, “Les migrations dans le sud de Madagascar: Entre sécheresses occasionnelles et crise socio-économique structurelle,” Autrepart 2 (2015): 259–78Google Scholar.

116 For figures suggesting steady populations, see Rakotomaharo, “Historique et Actualite,” 24, annexe 6. For figures that reflect losses, see AD 674PO/1/378, “Commercialisation par Categories d’Animaux,” s.d. On cyclones and weather conditions, see Donque, Gerald, “Les Cyclones Tropicaux des mers Malgaches,” Madagascar Revue de Géographie 27 (1975): 963 Google Scholar.

117 Althabe, Gerard, “Les manifestations paysannes d’avril 1971,” Revue française d’études politiques africaines 71 (1972): 7071, 71–74Google Scholar.

118 Fokon’olona were historically specific to highland Madagascar where they were transformed under Andrianampoinimerina (1787–1810) and “denoted the collective will of village elders, largely male, and served as a metaphor for local judicial and administrative autonomy.” (Larson, History and Memory, 180). French colonial authorities sought to expand fokon’olona across the island as a vehicle for rural governance and coercive public works projects, see Condominas, Georges, Fokon’olona et Collectivités Rurales en Imerina (Paris: Editions Berger-Levrault, 1962)Google Scholar. During the early 1970s, and especially under Ratsimandrava’s rule, debates roared about the role of fokon’olona as the mainstay in a highly decentralized government, much like Ujamaa villages in socialist Tanzania. See Raison-Jourde, “Les mots du socialism,” 94; Randrianja, Solofo and Ellis, Stephen, Madagascar: A Short History (Chicago: University of Chicago Press 2009), 192 Google Scholar.

119 Rakotomaharo, “Historique et Actualite,” annex 3.

120 AD 674PO/1/378, “Evolution de la Commercialisation dub Betail Dans la Province de Majunga,” n.d.

121 AD 673PO/1/261, “Letter from Jamoka,” 31 Oct. 1974; letter from French Consulat de Fianarantsoa Fernand Quesnot to Ministere des Affaires Etrangeres, 17 Jan. 1975.

122 “La Deuxième Chance de la Viande Malgache pour le Marché Zambien,” Le Courrier de Madagascar, 1 Aug. 1968.

123 “Pour des zébus a l’exportation des ‘cow-boys’ améliorés,” Le Courrier de Madagascar, 22 Mar. 1968.

124 AD 673PO/1/261, secret letter from Henri Gauthier, Chargé d’Affaires de France to M. Couve de Murville, Ministere des Affaires Etrangeres, “Commercialization of Meat,” 7 Apr. 1965.

125 AD 673PO/1/259, letter from Ambassador Alain Plantey to Ministere des Affaires Etrangeres, 18 Dec. 1968.

126 Ferguson, James, The Anti-Politics Machine: “Development,” Depoliticization, and Bureaucratic Power in Lesotho (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1994)Google Scholar; Evans-Pritchard, E. E., The Nuer: A Description of the Modes of Livelihood and Political Institutions of a Nilotic People (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1940)Google Scholar; Comaroff, John and Comaroff, Jean, “Goodly Beasts, Beastly Goods: Cattle and Commodities in a South African Context,” American Ethnologist 17, 2 (1990): 195216 Google Scholar. See too Hoag, Colin, “The Ovicaprine Mystique: Livestock Commodification in Postindustrial Lesotho,” American Anthropologist 120, 4 (2018): 725–37CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

127 Anderson, David, “Cow Power: Livestock and the Pastoralist in Africa,” African Affairs 92, 366 (1993): 121–33, 123–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

128 Coghe, “Creating the Renitelo.”

129 Joshua Grace, “Excremental Mobilities and Minimal Technopolitics: Toilets, Race, and Shitty History,” History and Anthropology (forthcoming 2024).

130 Sodikoff, Genese, “How to Protect Yourself from the Dead with Cattle,” in Porter, Natalie and Gershon, Ilana, eds., Living with Animals: Bonds across Species (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2018), 96105;Google Scholar Cole, Jennifer, Forget Colonialism? Sacrifice and the Art of Memory in Madagascar (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2001)Google Scholar; Bloch, Maurice, From Blessing to Violence: History and Ideology in the Circumcision Ritual of the Merina of Madagascar (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

131 Cattle markings also denoted relationships of enslavement. As elder men in Mahafaly and Androy land explained to Decary in the 1930s, an enslaved cattle owner ought to use the mark of his “master” or slave owner, and if eventually freed he could appeal to the village leader for authorization to create his own mark. Archives of the Musée d’Histoire Naturelle, Decary Papers, MS 2992, “Note sur les marques des oreilles de boeufs,” s.d.; and “Les marquages des boeufs chez les Mahafaly et Antandroy.”

132 Archives of the Musée d’Histoire Naturelle, Decary Papers, MS 2992, MS 2922, “Les marquages des boeufs…,” n.d.

133 Campbell, “Commercialisation of Cattle,” 185.

134 Otter, Chris, “Civilizing Slaughter: The Development of the British Public Abattoir, 1850–1910,” Food and History 3, 2 (2005): 2951, 32CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

135 Corbin, Alain, Time, Desire, and Horror: Towards a History of the Senses, Birrell, Jean, trans. (Berlin: Polity Press, 1995)Google Scholar; Vialles, Noilie, Animal to Edible, Underwood, J. A., trans. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994)Google Scholar.

136 Oral accounts from my research in Mahajanga [Majunga] between 2011–2014, and 2019, suggest that the significance for cattle owners of bearing witness till death was to ensure Islamic practices of slaughter were closely followed and to retain trusting relations with butchers and buyers along the way. Some elder residents noted that most in Mahajanga refused to frequent the modern abattoir in the 1970s because animals were unattended by the owners till slaughter.

137 More research is needed to determine whether witnessing practices were particular to Mahajanga or found in public abattoirs more broadly. Archival records on beef canning factories in nearby Boanamary (which closed in 1955), for instance, make no reference to owners accompanying livestock, but this could perhaps be explained by the enclosed nature of privately owned abattoirs or the historically important Islamic influence in Mahajanga. I thank Samuël Coghe for this observation.

138 AD 674PO/1/380, “Notes on the Activity of the Mahajanga [Majunga] Abattoir,” 23 Apr. 1979.

139 Ibid.

140 Ratsiraka, Didier, Charte de la Revolution Socialiste Malagasy [Boky Mena] (Tananarive: Imprimerie d’Ouvrages Educatifs, 1975)Google Scholar.

141 See, for instance, Thaddeus Sunseri, “Working in the Slaughterhouse: Tanganyika Packers Ltd., from Colonialism to Collapse, 1947–2014,” Labor History 59, 2 (2018): 215–37.

142 Hintzen, Percy, “After Modernization: Globalization and the African Dilemma,” in Bloom, Peter, Miescher, Stephan, and Manuh, Takyiwaa, eds., Modernization as Spectacle in Africa (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2014), 1940, 28Google Scholar.

Figure 0

Map 1. Beef Cattle Development Project Sites, Madagascar, 1960s–1970s. See note 43 regarding place names. Map by Tim Stallmann.