2021
DOI: 10.1177/2277976020973837
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Revisiting the Trimodal Agrarian Structure as a Social Differentiation Analysis Framework in Zimbabwe: A Study

Abstract: The study of social differentiation in the countryside is often dominated by the deployment of classical analytical frameworks. This article quantitatively explores social differentiation at the sub-national level (Chiredzi and Zvimba districts in Zimbabwe), through the use of the trimodal agrarian structure (TMAS) framework. It addresses the question of whether variables outlined in TMAS (land sizes, labor, and credit) stimulate social differentiation patterns across various settlement models, which emerged a… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Overall, three farm classes were created by the land reforms, namely the peasantry, small to medium and large capitalist farms (Moyo 2013;Shonhe, Scoones and Murimbarimba 2021;Mazwi, Muchetu and Mudimu 2021). The peasantry, which includes those who were allocated new A1 farms; existing old resettlement and communal areas are now the dominant category in the share of the number of farm households (98 per cent) and agricultural land owned (79 per cent) (Moyo 2011a: 262).…”
Section: Context: Agrarian Restructuring In Zimbabwementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Overall, three farm classes were created by the land reforms, namely the peasantry, small to medium and large capitalist farms (Moyo 2013;Shonhe, Scoones and Murimbarimba 2021;Mazwi, Muchetu and Mudimu 2021). The peasantry, which includes those who were allocated new A1 farms; existing old resettlement and communal areas are now the dominant category in the share of the number of farm households (98 per cent) and agricultural land owned (79 per cent) (Moyo 2011a: 262).…”
Section: Context: Agrarian Restructuring In Zimbabwementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Trends in rural differentiation in Africa, as well as the recent radical land reforms in Zimbabwe, have produced a tendency toward tri-modal agrarian structures (Moyo et al, 2009), hence, reconfiguring the methods for the internationalization of Brazil’s domestic policies (see, Mazwi et al, 2021; Pierri, 2013, p. 73). Yeros et al (2019, p. 108) argue that the commercial thrust in cooperation encourages the development of a middle layer in rural areas that complement the emerging tri-modal agrarian political economy in Africa, especially Zimbabwe.…”
Section: The Mfi Program In Zimbabwementioning
confidence: 99%
“…1,2 In the 2016/2017 farming season, against a background of perennial food shortages, the GoZ introduced the Special Maize Import Substitution Program, commonly referred to as Command Agriculture (CA). This program has sought to increase domestic production and reduce food imports in a state-driven contract-farming scheme that enlists the peasantry and small-scale capitalist farms with funding support from domestic capital (Mazwi et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This has also been the case in Zimbabwe, where increased focus has been on private-led contract farming after agricultural production declined in 2000–2009, following the implementation of the FTLRP (Binswanger-Mkhize & Moyo, 2012; Chambati & Mazwi, 2022; Mazwi, 2022; Sachikonye, 2016; Sakata, 2016; Scoones, et al, 2016). African states under neoliberalism have generally neglected the financing and production of staple cereals (Binswanger-Mkhize & Moyo, 2012; Mazwi et al, 2019), which for most countries has led to the ballooning of food import bills and a reliance on grain imported from the United States and Brazil (Mazwi et al, 2019; Moyo, 2011). Such neglect of cereal crops has brought to the fore debates on food self-sufficiency, whose importance has grown further in the context of the war in Ukraine, which has rendered food insecure and vulnerable for many African countries dependent on food and fertilizer imports from Ukraine and Russia.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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