one welfare

Mule trains to mountain roads: the role of working mules in supporting resilient communities in the Himalayas

Working equids play a central role in mountainous communities, but their work often goes unnoticed by the wider world, with sparse documentation of their role, value, or welfare – a state which often extends to their human counterparts. Communities living in the remote Manaslu Valley, Nepal, face a number of uncertainties, including extreme weather events due to the seasonal monsoon and, more recently, the construction of a new road network. Using semi-structured interviews, questionnaires, and Equine Assessment Research and Scoping (EARS) welfare assessments, we outline the specific role of pack mules in supporting the lives of local people, explain the nuanced links between human experience and mule welfare, and gain insight into how people living in this volatile environment manage uncertainty and risk. Mule work was felt to be the ‘only option’ for a sustainable livelihood for most mule owners although, in some cases, mules had enabled respondents to diversify their income. Mule owners with more husbandry experience did not own mules in more positive behavioural states, which may suggest a lack of generational knowledge and support networks. Short-term ongoing risks, such as the monsoon or unstable tracks, had a larger impact both financially and emotionally than the long-term but distant implications of the road construction. Mule owners must constantly balance the risk of working during the monsoon season, when conditions are treacherous but pay was higher, with losing valuable income but keeping themselves and their mules safe; they do, however, have a more mobile option for employment than non-owners. Mules enable a level of resilience and agility for communities living with constant uncertainty and change, which is only beginning to be recognised formally within the sustainable development sphere. Integration of animal welfare into the SDGs would allow humanitarian aid initiatives to strengthen support networks around working equids, which would greatly benefit the mules and humans alike.

Volume
11
Publication date
Research output
Country

Bonded labour and donkey ownership in the brick kilns of India: A need for reform of policy and practice

Slavery, in the form of ‘debt-bondage’, is rife in Indian brick kilns, where the enforcement of labour laws is poor. Working equids support brick-kiln workers by transporting raw bricks into the kilns, but the situation of equids and their owners within the brick kilns is relatively unknown. We describe the welfare of donkeys (Equus asinus) owned under conditions of debt-bondage, examine the links between owner and donkey behaviour, and outline the living conditions of both donkeys and humans working in the brick kilns of Gujarat, India. We then explore the unique experience of debt-bondage by donkey owners, compare migration trends to those of non-donkey-owning workers and assess impacts on their children’s education. The physical and behavioural conditions of donkeys reflected that of their owners, creating negative feedback loops and potentially reducing productivity. All donkey owners experienced debt-bondage and were particularly vulnerable to unexpected financial loss. Donkey owners, unlike non-owners, migrated within their home state, enabling their children to attend school. Our work highlights the need for policy reform within the brick-kiln industry to acknowledge the pivotal role of working donkeys in supporting human livelihoods.

Journal
Volume
32
Issue
8
Start page
1
End page
11
Publication date
Research output

The role, importance and impact of veterinary drug retail outlets (VDRO) on the welfare of equines and their owners in India

Status
Researcher(s)
Start date
End date
Country

In spite of their official classification under “livestock”, and the significant role they play in the livelihoods of millions in the developing world, equines and those who depend upon them for their livelihoods tend to be ignored within the research agenda. It is also the case that other livestock are often valued over working equines due to their 'direct link to food and nutritional security'. Equine welfare in this case, with respect to veterinary treatment, might therefore suffer as a consequence of this placement of value. Couple this with the fact that the majority of donkey and mule owners in developing countries live in marginalised or poor communities and it becomes clear that the medicating practices of equine owners require further investigation to understand how they make decisions regarding the veterinary treatment of their animals, and who they source their medication and advice from when their animals require medications. This research will attempt to fill some of these gaps in knowledge.

Methodology

Fieldwork focussed largely on communities working in brick kilns but also incorporated some working in construction. A small proportion of the research aimed to capture any differences between sites where Donkey Sanctuary India (DSI) partners had provided veterinary interventions and advice and sites not visited by DSI. A mixed methods approach was identified as most appropriate in capturing the lived experience of donkey owners as well as members of the veterinary retail outlet workforce, and was undertaken through semi-structured interviews (enabling quantitative and qualitative data capture), focus groups, patient simulation method, knowledge assessment through the use of vignettes. Both donkey owners/users as well as a purposive sample of VDRO workforce members and veterinary service providers was recruited for participation. Equine welfare was measured using the Equid Assessment Research Scoping (EARS) tool. Videos were also taken of each equid/ group of equids for qualitative behavioural assessment. Fieldwork was carried out in February/ March due to their relative seasonal reliability in terms of weather, as well as corresponding with the early brick kiln season in the specified study location.

Aims

This project contributes to, what is currently, a limited existing body of knowledge regarding equine health service provision in India. It focused primarily on the role of veterinary drug retail outlets in urban areas such as Haldwani), peri-urban areas (such as Rewari and Firozabad), and rural areas (within Uttarakhand or Rajasthan).

The research aimed to understand:

  • User perception and experience of veterinary drug retail outlets in terms of affordability, availability, accessibility, acceptability, quality of service and sustainability.
  • The extent to which users depend on the services of veterinary drug retail outlets in the treatment of their animals and equines
  • The characteristics (outlet type, products stocked, drugs stocked, drug sources), capacities (training, education, skills), and drug prescribing practices of the retail outlet and its workforce
  • The impact of the above variables on donkey/mule welfare

Further to these aims, the project sought to identify constraints to equine owners with regards to equine welfare, as well as to examine the working constraints of the veterinary drug retail outlet workforce in the designated region of study.

Data collected regarding the above points was analysed alongside equine welfare data collected via the EARS tool in order to discover any potential correlation between equine welfare and retail outlet-related variables.

A small proportion of this study included comparison work between Donkey Sanctuary India sites and sites where there has been little to no intervention by an equine-related organisation.

Objectives

The purpose of this research project was to identify the role, importance, and impact of veterinary drug retail outlets (VDROs) on working equine welfare in India. The research gathered relevant data regarding health and wellbeing of donkeys in greatest need internationally, as well as aiding to understand associated biosecurity and environmental risks (such as cross contamination or antimicrobial resistance), and equine lifecycle and disease.

Conclusions

The study highlighted significant issues around the capacity of retail drug outlets particularly; a lack of knowledge, education and training in the dispensing of drugs to equids meant many equids received either the wrong treatment or incorrect dosage for presenting symptoms; when antimicrobials were offered this malpractice has considerable implications for antimicrobial resistance in equid populations. This is of particular concern when considering the highly mobile nature of working equids; frequently crossing borders whilst being translocated for migratory work and when being sold. For more in depth details of the study findings please read the two research outputs below.

Outputs

Nye, Caroline, Tamlin Watson, Laura Kubasiewicz, Zoe Raw, and Faith Burden. 2020. "No Prescription, No Problem! A Mixed-Methods Study of Antimicrobial Stewardship Relating to Working Equines in Drug Retail Outlets of Northern India" Antibiotics 9, no. 6: 295. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics9060295

 

Nye, Caroline, Tamlin Watson, Laura M. Kubasiewicz, Zoe Raw, and Faith Burden. 2021. "‘Don’t Put the Cart before the Mule!’ Challenging Assumptions Regarding Health-Related Treatment Practices of Working Equid Owners in Northern India" Animals 11, no. 5: 1307. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11051307

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