Eco ancestry: Uganda's green revolution

dc.contributor.author Lubogo, Jireh Isaac; Lubogo, Isaac Christopher and Mulungi, Aisha.
dc.date.accessioned 2026-03-27T15:59:06Z
dc.date.available 2026-03-27T15:59:06Z
dc.date.issued 2024
dc.description A book
dc.description.abstract Every society has an ecological memory. It is written in its agricultural practices, its seasonal calendars, its sacred sites, its stories, and its laws governing the use of land and water. For Uganda, that memory is rich, diverse, and increasingly endangered — not by time alone, but by the pace of change that has made the connection between present Ugandans and their ecological heritage feel distant, even irrelevant. The term "Eco Ancestry" is introduced in this book as a conceptual framework and a call to action. It holds that ecological sustainability is not merely a technical challenge — a matter of better seeds, cleaner energy, or more efficient land use — but a moral and cultural one. It asks: what obligations do we owe to the land, to one another, and to those who will come after us? This question is not new in Uganda. It was answered, imperfectly but meaningfully, by the pre-colonial societies whose clan-based stewardship systems allocated land, forest, and water with a logic that balanced use with regeneration. It was disrupted by colonial economic restructuring, which replaced stewardship with extraction. It has been further complicated by post-independence development pressures that, while bringing real improvements in health and education, have imposed enormous costs on Uganda's natural systems. The purpose of this introduction is to situate the reader in the argument of the book as a whole. The chapters that follow are organized into seven parts. Part I examines Uganda's ecological history — what was here before, what was disrupted, and what the consequences have been. Part II surveys the current crisis honestly and without embellishment. Part III develops the Eco Ancestry framework as a philosophical and practical response. Parts IV and V move into solutions — sectoral strategies and the policy architecture needed to implement them. Part VI examines the human dimensions of transformation. Part VII looks toward the future, offering scenarios, blueprints, and a vision of regeneration. Throughout, the authors have been disciplined about evidence. Every claim in this book is grounded in verifiable data, peer-reviewed research, or official government documentation. Where evidence is uncertain, we say so. Where expert opinion is divided, we present the division. The reader will find no fabricated statistics, no invented quotations, and no promised outcomes that exceed what evidence can support. Uganda's green revolution will not be imported. It must be grown — from the soil of its own history, knowledge, and determination.
dc.identifier.citation Lubogo, J. I.; Lubogo, I. C. and Mulungi, A. (2024). Eco ancestry: Uganda's green revolution; Published by Fountain Publishers, Kampala.
dc.identifier.isbn 978-9970-25-XXX-X
dc.identifier.uri https://makir.mak.ac.ug/handle/10570/16780
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher Fountain Publishers
dc.title Eco ancestry: Uganda's green revolution
dc.type Book
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