[OPE-L] Land Grab or Taking Back Stolen Land: The Fast Track Land Reform Process in Zimbabwe in Historical Perspective By Alois S. Mlambo, University of Pretoria

From: Rakesh Bhandari (bhandari@BERKELEY.EDU)
Date: Sun Jan 29 2006 - 13:05:36 EST


Given previous discussion on OPE-L, I thought people
may find this important. The general web site is interesting too.
rb


Land Grab or Taking Back Stolen Land: The Fast Track Land Reform
Process in Zimbabwe in Historical Perspective
By Alois S. Mlambo, University of Pretoria

Abstract

This article seeks to place the current land crisis in Zimbabwe in
its proper historical context by tracing the origins of the problem
of the land question from the early years of British colonization at
the turn of the twentieth century, through the anti-colonial
struggles of the 1960s and 1970s, the first twenty years of
independence, to the farm invasions of 2000 and beyond. It argues
that the tendency in debates over the land question to cast it in
terms of good versus evil oversimplifies a rather complex issue and
does not advance understanding of the forces that helped shape the
trajectory of the country's recent experience relating to land tenure
and appeals for a more historically-informed approach to the issue.
Finally, the article suggests that the colonial system, the Lancaster
House constitution, the British and Zimbabwean governments and white
commercial farmers are all to blame for the current land crisis in
Zimbabwe.

http://www.history-compass.com/viewpoint.asp?section=1&ref=136


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