Society, Power, and Land in Northeastern Zimbabwe, Ca. 1560–1960

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A01=Admire Mseba
agricultural politics
agriculture
Author_Admire Mseba
Category=NHH
chimurenga
colonialism
commercial farming
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
farming rights
Fast Track Land Reform
forced removal from land
human rights violations
indigenous chiefs
land inequity
land redistribution
land reform
land seizure
land use
natural resources
politics and land use
postcolonialism
racial inequality
resettlement
Rhodesia
Robert Mugabe
white landowners

Product details

  • ISBN 9780821425893
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Nov 2024
  • Publisher: Ohio University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A little over two decades ago, Zimbabwe undertook its Fast Track Land Reform Programme. Critics saw it as nothing more than an assault on human and property rights for political expedience by a ruling elite that was fast losing its power. In contrast, those sympathetic to the land reform program saw it as fundamental to the righting of colonialism’s historical wrongs. Yet, rural displacements at the hands of state actors, or of those closely connected to them, continue. As in the past, the continuing land conflicts are mostly understood as the result of the actions of an authoritarian state that exploits its control of land for the political and economic benefit of those who inhabit it. These explanations share one thing in common: each understands the country’s perpetual land questions in terms of the actions or inactions of the colonial or the postcolonial state.
This book refocuses attention on how regimes of power rooted in kinship, gender, generation, and status have, individually and in combination, informed access to land in precolonial northeastern Zimbabwe. It then examines how these regimes of power interacted with colonial policies to inform the African experience in colonial Zimbabwe. Further, the book places land and the ability to ensure its fecundity at the center of the making and moderation of precolonial political power and how this power was impacted by the imposition of colonial rule.
Tracing the dynamics of land and power from precolonial times, together with their entanglement with colonial policies, is important, for this relationship is almost always neglected by both scholars and policymakers drawn to the high drama of colonial and postcolonial politics of land. This oversight has real consequences on our understandings of landed inequalities and how they are addressed. When Zimbabwe’s postcolonial state focused on colonially induced racialized land inequalities, its land reform efforts left older forms of landed inequalities based on gender, generation, and ideas of belonging intact. The book, which details these inequalities, reminds Zimbabweans and others that if the quest for equity espoused in postcolonial land reforms is to be meaningful, it must be attentive to both colonially induced inequalities and those enduring disparities that predated, were deepened by, and outlived colonial rule. At the same time, Zimbabweans who now live with a postcolonial state that is increasingly centralizing power over land may well learn from past societies’ creative efforts to limit the authority of their leaders.

Admire Mseba is an assistant professor in the Van Hunnick History Department at the University of Southern California. His research has appeared in the African Studies Review, the Journal of Southern African Studies, the International Journal of African Historical Studies, African Economic History, and several edited collections. He teaches courses in the deep and recent African past as well as in African environmental and economic history.

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