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Emerging from Below? Understanding the Livelihood Trajectories of Smallholder Livestock Farmers in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa

Lovemore C. Gwiriri, James Bennett, Cletos Mapiye, Sara Burbi

2021Land13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the context of current agrarian reform efforts in South Africa, this paper analyses the livelihood trajectories of ‘emergent’ farmers in Eastern Cape Province. We apply a rural livelihoods framework to 60 emergent cattle farmers to understand the different capitals they have drawn upon in transitioning to their current class positions and associated vulnerability. The analysis shows that, for the majority of farmers, no real ‘transition’ from subsistence farming has occurred. However, they draw limited resilience from increased livestock holdings, continued reliance on social grants and connections with communal villages. A transition into small-scale commercial farming is apparent for a small number of farmers through the deployment of financial, human and social capitals. However, in following these trajectories, most of these farmers have been made more vulnerable to shocks and stresses than previously. We suggest that key to mitigating this vulnerability will be access to low-risk financial capital, more targeted support, and strategies to support farmers that might not transition from subsistence production.

Topics & Concepts

LivelihoodSubsistence agricultureVulnerability (computing)AgriculturePsychological resilienceGeographyContext (archaeology)LivestockAgrarian societyBusinessSocial capitalSocioeconomicsEconomic growthNatural resource economicsAgricultural economicsEconomicsPolitical scienceForestryPsychologyComputer sciencePsychotherapistComputer securityLawArchaeologyAgriculture, Land Use, Rural DevelopmentAgricultural Innovations and PracticesInnovation and Socioeconomic Development
Emerging from Below? Understanding the Livelihood Trajectories of Smallholder Livestock Farmers in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa | Litcius