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Journal Article

Agricultural Commercialisation and Changing Labour Regimes in Zimbabwe

Published on 3 August 2021

This paper explores the emerging labour regimes and the consequences for agricultural commercialisation across multiple land-use types in post land reform Zimbabwe. The livelihoods of farmworkers, including those still resident in former labour compounds, are explored.

The paper examines patterns of employment, land access, crop farming, asset ownership and off-farm activities, highlighting the diversification of livelihoods. The old pattern of wage-employed, permanent farmworkers is increasingly rare, as autonomous, flexible combinations of wage work, farming and a range of entrepreneurial and informal activities emerge. The paper thus engages with the wider debate about the changing nature of ‘work’ and ‘employment’, alongside discussions about the class implications of ‘working people’ and ‘fractured classes of labour’ in transforming agrarian economies. Without a captive, resident workforce, commercial agriculture must mobilise labour in new ways, as the farm work and workers have been refashioned in the new agrarian setting.

Cite this publication

Shonhe. T., Scoones. I., and Murimbarimba. F., (2021) Agricultural Commercialisation and Changing Labour Regimes in Zimbabwe, Journal of Contemporary African Studies, DOI: 10.1080/02589001.2021.1933397

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Authors

Ian Scoones

Professorial Fellow

Toendepi Shonhe
Felix Murimbarimba

Publication details

published by
Taylor & Francis
language
English

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About this publication

Region
Zimbabwe

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