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The Political Economy of Agricultural Commercialisation in Zimbabwe || APRA Working Paper 12

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posted on 2024-09-05, 22:11 authored by Toendepi Shonhe
Debates on Zimbabwe’s agricultural development have centred on different framings of agriculture viability and land redistribution, which are often antagonistic. Yet, emerging evidence of agricultural commercialisation pathways shows complex and differentiated deepening and stagnations across settlement models. Normative– political constructions of ‘good’, ‘modern’ and ‘progressive’, as advocated by large-scale farmers and some bureaucrats, are countered by proponents for redistribution, mainly the landless rural peasants, keen on social and economic justice as well as democratic land ownership. Across the divide, commercialisation of agriculture is seen as efficient and poverty-reducing. This paper explores how these contrasting debates have played out in Zimbabwe over time, and what interests are aligned with different positions. The paper locates the discussion in a critical examination of the politics of agrarian change and presents a political economy and policy process review of winners and losers in commercialisation.

Funding

Department for International Development, UK Government

History

Publisher

APRA, Future Agricultures Consortium

Citation

Shonhe, Toendepi. (2018) ‘The Political Economy of Agricultural Commercialisation in Zimbabwe’ APRA Working Paper 12, Future Agricultures Consortium

Series

APRA Working Papers 12

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

IDS Item Types

Series paper (IDS)

Copyright holder

APRA, Future Agricultures Consortium

Country

South Africa

Language

en

IDS team

Rural Futures

Project identifier

APRA::e1f6d3be-457a-4f13-8b1f-6748d1402d83::600

Identifier ISBN

978-1-78118-451-6

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    Future Agricultures Consortium

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