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Changing agrarian labour relations in Zimbabwe in the context of the fast track land reform

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dc.contributor.advisor Mogale, Mathukhu Thomas
dc.contributor.advisor Kahn, Sinval
dc.contributor.author Chambati, Walter S. S.
dc.date.accessioned 2020-11-05T07:18:38Z
dc.date.available 2020-11-05T07:18:38Z
dc.date.issued 2019-06
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/26800
dc.description.abstract This thesis examined the evolution and transition of agrarian labour relations in the aftermath of Zimbabwe‘s radical land redistribution, which reconfigured the agrarian structure in terms of landholdings, production practices and labour markets from 2000. Despite the importance of agrarian labour as source of livelihood for the largely countryside based population, insufficient academic attention has been paid to its evolution following the land reforms. Specifically to the mobilisation, organisation and utilisation of wage and non-wage labour against background of the changed land ownership patterns, agrarian policies and macro-economic conditions. Historical-structural approaches rooted in Marxist Political Economy informed the analysis of the new agrarian labour relations since in former Settler colonies such as Zimbabwe these were based were based on a historical context of specific land-labour utilisation relations created by land dispossession and discriminatory agrarian policies during the colonial and immediate independence period. Beyond this, gender issues, intra-household relations, kinship, citizenship and the agency of the workers were taken into account to understand the trajectory of labour relations. Detailed quantitative and qualitative empirical research in Goromonzi and Kwekwe districts, as well as from other sources demonstrated that a new agrarian labour regime had evolved to replace the predominant wage labour in former large-scale commercial farms. There has been a growth in the use of self-employed family farm labour alongside the differentiated use of wage labour in farming and other non-farm activities. Inequitable gender and generational tendencies were evident in the new agrarian labour regime. The new labour relations are marked by the exploitation of farm workers through wages that are below the cost of social reproduction, insecure forms of employment and poor working conditions. While their individual and collective worker agency is yet to reverse their poor socio-economic conditions. Various policy interventions to protect their land and labour rights are thus required. The study shed light on the the conceptual understanding of agrarian labour relations in former Settler economies, including the role of land reforms in the development of employment, and how the peasantry with enlarged land access are reconstituted through repeasantisation and semi-proletarianisation processes. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xix, 565 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Redistributive land reform en
dc.subject Agrarian structure en
dc.subject Agraian labour relations en
dc.subject Self-employment en
dc.subject Repeasantisation en
dc.subject Semi-proletarianisation en
dc.subject De-agrarianisation en
dc.subject Fam wage labour en
dc.subject Non-farm labour en
dc.subject Peasantry en
dc.subject Labour markets en
dc.subject Agency en
dc.subject Residential labour tenancy en
dc.subject Social reproduction en
dc.subject Agency en
dc.subject Resistance en
dc.subject Zimbabwe en
dc.subject.ddc 338.186891
dc.subject.lcsh Land reform -- Zimbabwe en
dc.subject.lcsh Land use -- Zimbabwe en
dc.subject.lcsh Land tenure -- Zimbabwe en
dc.subject.lcsh Agriculture -- Zimbabwe en
dc.title Changing agrarian labour relations in Zimbabwe in the context of the fast track land reform en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Public Administration and Management en
dc.description.degree D. P. A.


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