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The
fast track resettlement and urban development nexus: The case for
Harare
Nelson Marongwe, ZERO – Regional Environment Organisation
June
2003
http://www.oxfam.org.uk/what_we_do/issues/livelihoods/landrights/downloads/harare_fast_track.doc
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Paper Presented
at the: Symposium on Delivering Land and securing Rural Livelihoods:
Post Independence Land Reform and Resettlement in Zimbabwe, Mont
Clair, Nyanga, 26-28 March 2003.
Introduction and Context of the Study
The year 2000 farm occupations witnessed a massive movement of people
from various localities into large-scale commercial farms in search
of agricultural land. Whilst most land occupations took place in
commercial farming areas in predominantly rural areas close to communal
areas, there was also a steady movement into and occupation of various
forms of urban and peri-urban areas as the "landless"
urban people also took the opportunity and exploited the chaotic
situation created by farm occupations countrywide.
On the other hand, Zimbabwe's land policy had already realized the
importance of peri-urban settlement in the country's land reform
process (GOZ 1998). For instance, the Inception Phase Framework
Plan proposed, among other things, to develop mechanisms for monitoring
urban growth and the demand for and supply of urban land both within
and outside existing towns and cities. One of the aims of the policy
document is to manage peri-urban areas as zones of transition that
maximise the enjoyment of positive elements of both town and country.
The rural-urban nexus is therefore an important area for policy
analysis and research. It is commonly understood that urban development
can only occur at the expense of rural land. The changing land-uses,
policy environments, land ownership patterns and land administrative
mechanism that occur in such transitional zones are key factors
that define the dynamics of development in urban and peri-urban
areas.
Studies world-wide have shown that small farms almost always produce
far more agricultural output per unit area than large farms. This
has been proven to be the case for both industrialised and developing
countries. There is wide literature that has confirmed the inverse
relationship between farm size and output (Ellis 1993, Berry and
Cline W. R. 1979, Feder 1985, Prosterman and Riedinger 1987, Cornia
1985, Netting 1993). For example, various studies have showed that
the smallest farms have greater dollar output per acre than larger
farms. There are many reasons that explain this situation, with
the most obvious ones being that smaller farms tend to specialise
in high value crops like vegetables and flowers, that there is more
labour and inputs applied per unit area and that there is a tendency
towards the use of more diverse farming systems (Strange 1988).
Peri-urban areas provide the greatest opportunity and environment
for the implementation of small-farm based resettlement approaches.
Intensity of land-use is most practical in the peri-urban areas.
The experience of urban allotment gardens in developed countries
provides a useful insight on how urban and peri-urban farming can
be modelled. This debate largely provides the rationale on why Zimbabwe's
land reform processes has carved a niche for urban and peri-urban
settlement. This approach in a way accommodates the land requirements
of urban agriculture, especially for peri-urban areas.
This paper discusses the nexus between fast track resettlement and
urban development. As is mentioned elsewhere in this report, land
occupations cum-fast track resettlement in urban and peri-urban
areas was driven by two main motives. Firstly, it was the desire
by certain sections of the urban populace to access land for residential
purposes. Secondly, there was also an inherent desire by settlers
to access land for the practice of urban and peri-urban agriculture.
Many other scholars have demonstrated the importance of urban agriculture
in urban areas and that access to land was the greatest constraint
to the activity (Mbiba 1995, Mudimu 1986, Masoka 1997, ENDA-Zimbabwe
1994). Thus some settlers seized the opportunity presented by fast
track to access land for the practice of urban agriculture.
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