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Gender, land reform and welfare outcomes : a case study of Chiredzi District, Zimbabwe

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dc.contributor.advisor Adesina, Jimi O.
dc.contributor.author Tekwa, Newman
dc.date.accessioned 2021-02-23T13:27:30Z
dc.date.available 2021-02-23T13:27:30Z
dc.date.issued 2020-02
dc.date.submitted 2021-02-23
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/27126
dc.description.abstract This thesis explores questions of gender equality in social welfare theory; methodologies; approaches and policymaking in the Global South in the context of land reforms. This stems from the realisation that gender equality issues in social welfare are increasingly receiving greater attention in the context of the Global North and less in the South. By adopting a Transformative Social Policy framework, the research departs from hegemonic livelihoods, poverty reduction and the ‘classical models’ of land reforms often designed from the mould of the neoliberal discourse of individual tenure to focus on land reform as a relational question. Empirical data was gathered using a sequential explanatory mixed-methods approach involving survey questionnaires; in-depths interviews; focus group discussions; key informant interviews and field observations. A total of 105 randomly selected households, comprising 56 male-headed households (MHHs) and 49 female-headed households (FHHs) participated in the quantitative component of the study, comprising a control group of nonland reform beneficiaries. Additionally, 30 purposively selected in-depths interviews comprising 20 FHHs and 10 MHHs were conducted in resettlement study sites. Findings from this this study indicates that despite the country’s depressed economic environment and the effects of climate change, transfer of land enhanced the productive capacities of individuals and rural households, including those headed by females. At micro-level, in-kind transfer of land to rural households proved to be a more superior social protection measure compared to either food or cash transfer. However, social relations and institutions proved resistant to change, posing a greater obstacle to social transformation. And more importantly, from a social reproductive perspective, the same land reform that enhanced the productive capacities of women, inadvertently, increased their social reproductive work with implications on the welfare of women relative to men. The thesis makes a contribution to social policy debates in Africa, which hitherto have been dominated by the introduction of cash transfers as witnessed in many countries across the continent. The transformative social policy approach brings novelty to the study of land reforms. By Conceptualising gender as a relational and social construct, the study adds knowledge on the nexus between gender, land reform and welfare using the Fast Track Land Reform Programme (FTLRP) as reference. With the FTLRP––as a leftist policy in a liberalised economy––there is a need for the government to re-align its social and economic policies to avoid inconsistencies in the country’s development path. On the gender front there is need to legislate resettlement areas as outside the jurisdiction of traditional structures; promulgate statutory instruments dealing with land and setting up designated land claims courts linked right up to the Constitutional Court. Specifically, for Chiredzi, there is a need to establish a corporate body to administer the affairs of Mkwasine following the pulling out of the Estate. Keywords: gender, land reforms, water reforms, transformative en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xx, 394 leaves) : illustrations (some color), color map, color graph en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Gender en
dc.subject Land reforms en
dc.subject Water reforms en
dc.subject Transformative social policy en
dc.subject Chiredzi en
dc.subject Zimbabwe en
dc.subject.ddc 333.316891
dc.subject.lcsh Land reform -- Social aspects -- Zimbabwe -- Chiredzi Rural District -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Land reform -- Economic aspects -- Zimbabwe -- Chiredzi Rural District -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Land tenure -- Social aspects -- Zimbabwe -- Chiredzi Rural District -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Land tenure -- Economic aspects -- Zimbabwe -- Chiredzi Rural District -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Agriculture and state -- Zimbabwe -- Chiredzi Rural District -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Women in agriculture -- Zimbabwe -- Chiredzi Rural District -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Women and land use planning -- Government policy -- Zimbabwe -- Chiredzi Rural District -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Land settlement -- Government policy -- Zimbabwe -- Chiredzi Rural District -- Case studies en
dc.subject.lcsh Fast Track Land Reform Programme (Zimbabwe) en
dc.subject.lcsh Water-supply, Agricultural -- Zimbabwe -- Chiredzi Rural District -- Case studies en
dc.title Gender, land reform and welfare outcomes : a case study of Chiredzi District, Zimbabwe en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Sociology en
dc.description.degree Ph. D. (Sociology)


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