posted on 2024-09-06, 06:05authored byF.M. Chinembiri
n Zimbabwe in excess of 54 percent of the national herd is in the communal areas. This herd plays a crucial role in the communal area social economy - mainly in increasing food production, either directly or indirectly. Furthermore, this herd has a multi-function character. Thus the introduction of suitable production systems for the sub-sector is of prime importance to national development. In Zimbabwe, as in many African countries, "Livestock development planning has frequently been a case of planning without facts" (Grandin 1987). As a result the guiding principles of the livestock development strategy for communal areas have exhibited a high degree of freedom, emphasizing a learning approach as opposed to a blueprint approach.
A conference paper on livestock production in the rural areas of Zimbabwe in the period before the land reform programmes.
Funding
This publication has been made possible as a result of generous financial support from the German Agency for Technical Cooperation (GTZ) and the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) of Ottawa.
History
Publisher
Centre for Applied Social Sciences (CASS) ; University of Zimbabwe (UZ)
Citation
Chinembiri, F.M. (1989) Livestock extention programmes and packages in the communal lands of Zimbabwe. In: Cousins, B. (ed.) People, land and livestock: proceedings of a workshop on the socio-economic dimensions of livestock production in the communal lands of Zimbabwe, held at Great Zimbabwe, Masvingo, 12th to 14th September, 1988, pp. 139-155. Harare: CASS.
IDS Item Types
Conference paper; Book chapter
Copyright holder
Uiversity of Zimbabwe's Centre for Applied Social Sciences (CASS)