Gender, Household Food Security and Neoliberal Decimation of the Grain-Producing Peasantry in Zimbabwe

With over half of the Zimbabwean population now facing food hunger, this could be juxtaposed to the 1980s’ dirigiste period when the state boosted peasant maize production (as a proportion of national maize output) from 3.6% in 1979/80 to 35.6% in 1984/85. Since then, though interspersed with brief...

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Main Authors: Tekwa, Newman, Tekwa, Happymore
Format: Book chapter
Language:English
Published: Springer, Cham 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-89824-3_6
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/5039
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author Tekwa, Newman
Tekwa, Happymore
author_facet Tekwa, Newman
Tekwa, Happymore
author_sort Tekwa, Newman
collection DSpace
description With over half of the Zimbabwean population now facing food hunger, this could be juxtaposed to the 1980s’ dirigiste period when the state boosted peasant maize production (as a proportion of national maize output) from 3.6% in 1979/80 to 35.6% in 1984/85. Since then, though interspersed with brief periods of heavy state involvement in the 2000s, Zimbabwe has undergone three decades of economic liberalisation from a Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) in the early 1990s to the current Transition Stabilisation Programme (TSP). The gendered effects of decades of agricultural market liberalisation on peasant households in the country remain inadequately documented and analysed. In this chapter, we first consider the extent to which the shift from dirigisme to liberalisation affected integration, efficiency and competitiveness in the agricultural sector. We examine the distribution of benefits of market liberalisation across different scales of agricultural production in addition to interrogating how female peasants have fared in these economic restructuring processes relative to men, primarily in relation to food security. We argue that liberalisation negatively impacted peasant maize production and curtailed the dual role of peasant households, leading to gender-differentiated knock-on effects for household food security. This highlights the crucial role of the state in ensuring national and household food sufficiency.
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spelling ir-11408-50392022-08-02T18:36:25Z Gender, Household Food Security and Neoliberal Decimation of the Grain-Producing Peasantry in Zimbabwe Tekwa, Newman Tekwa, Happymore Gender Neoliberalism Household food security Grain-producing peasantry Zimbabwe With over half of the Zimbabwean population now facing food hunger, this could be juxtaposed to the 1980s’ dirigiste period when the state boosted peasant maize production (as a proportion of national maize output) from 3.6% in 1979/80 to 35.6% in 1984/85. Since then, though interspersed with brief periods of heavy state involvement in the 2000s, Zimbabwe has undergone three decades of economic liberalisation from a Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) in the early 1990s to the current Transition Stabilisation Programme (TSP). The gendered effects of decades of agricultural market liberalisation on peasant households in the country remain inadequately documented and analysed. In this chapter, we first consider the extent to which the shift from dirigisme to liberalisation affected integration, efficiency and competitiveness in the agricultural sector. We examine the distribution of benefits of market liberalisation across different scales of agricultural production in addition to interrogating how female peasants have fared in these economic restructuring processes relative to men, primarily in relation to food security. We argue that liberalisation negatively impacted peasant maize production and curtailed the dual role of peasant households, leading to gender-differentiated knock-on effects for household food security. This highlights the crucial role of the state in ensuring national and household food sufficiency. 2022-08-02T18:36:25Z 2022-08-02T18:36:25Z 2022-02-12 Book chapter Tekwa, N., Tekwa, H. (2022). Gender, Household Food Security and Neoliberal Decimation of the Grain-Producing Peasantry in Zimbabwe. In: Mazwi, F., Mudimu, G.T., Helliker, K. (eds) Capital Penetration and the Peasantry in Southern and Eastern Africa. Advances in African Economic, Social and Political Development. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-89824-3_6 978-3-030-89823-6 978-3-030-89824-3 https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-89824-3_6 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/5039 en Capital Penetration and the Peasantry in Southern and Eastern Africa;Pages 119 – 139 open Springer, Cham
spellingShingle Gender
Neoliberalism
Household food security
Grain-producing peasantry
Zimbabwe
Tekwa, Newman
Tekwa, Happymore
Gender, Household Food Security and Neoliberal Decimation of the Grain-Producing Peasantry in Zimbabwe
title Gender, Household Food Security and Neoliberal Decimation of the Grain-Producing Peasantry in Zimbabwe
title_full Gender, Household Food Security and Neoliberal Decimation of the Grain-Producing Peasantry in Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Gender, Household Food Security and Neoliberal Decimation of the Grain-Producing Peasantry in Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Gender, Household Food Security and Neoliberal Decimation of the Grain-Producing Peasantry in Zimbabwe
title_short Gender, Household Food Security and Neoliberal Decimation of the Grain-Producing Peasantry in Zimbabwe
title_sort gender, household food security and neoliberal decimation of the grain-producing peasantry in zimbabwe
topic Gender
Neoliberalism
Household food security
Grain-producing peasantry
Zimbabwe
url https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-89824-3_6
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/5039
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