Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10646/707
Title: Zimbabwe's agrarian reform process: lessons or domino strategies?
Authors: Moyo, Sam
Keywords: Agrarian reform process
land reform
land policy
Zimbabwe
Issue Date: 1991
Publisher: Zimbabwe Institute of Development Studies
Citation: Moyo, Sam (1991). Zimbabwe's agrarian reform process: lessons or domino: Zimbabwe Institute of Development Studies; 38p.
Series/Report no.: Discussion paper;12
Abstract: It is becoming increasingly fashionable to proffer all kind of lessons for a post-apartheid South Africa, not the least since the independence of Namibia in 1990 and as the geo-political colour of Southern Africa shifts under the new wave of peace initiatives throughout its formerly radical territories. Due to the crucial role played by the agrarian question in Zimbabwe's liberation struggle and the apparent "agricultural success" and related political calm that has marked the first 10 years of transition, as well as due to the existence of certain agrarian structural and socio-political "similarities" between Zimbabwe and South Africa, the former's experience has received post-apartheid prognostic attention. The usefulness of such comparative analysis depends, however, on the degree to which the Zimbabwean case is adequately portrayed and on an appropriate appreciation of the context before 1980 and during the last decade.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10646/707
Appears in Collections:IDS Research, Discussion and Working Papers

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