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Zimbabwe's
land reform: Challenging the myths
Ian
Scoones, Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex
December 02, 2011
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Abstract
Most commentary
on Zimbabwe's land reform insists that agricultural production
has almost totally collapsed, that food insecurity is rife, that
rural economies are in precipitous decline, that political 'cronies'
have taken over the land and that farm labour has all been displaced.
This paper however argues that the story is not simply one of collapse
and catastrophe; it is much more nuanced and complex, with successes
as well as failures. The paper provides a summary of some of the
key findings from a ten-year study in Masvingo province and the
book Zimbabwe's Land Reform: Myths and Realities. The paper
documents the nature of the radical transformation of agrarian structure
that has occurred both nationally and within the province, and the
implications for agricultural production and livelihoods. A discussion
of who got the land shows the diversity of new settlers, many of
whom have invested substantially in their new farms. An emergent
group 'middle farmers' is identified who are producing,
investing and accumulating. This has important implications - both
economically and politically - for the future, as the final section
on policy challenges discusses.
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