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Food security and the contested visions of agrarian change in Africa

Toby Leon Moorsom, Sheila Rao, Heidi Gengenbach, Christopher Huggins

2020Canadian Journal of Development Studies/Revue canadienne d études du développement12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

African countries are subject to competing visions of agricultural development. Efforts to “scale up” technocratic, market-based approaches focus on productivist indices (yields, income) rather than food access. Alternatives advocate agro-ecological practices, re-adoption of indigenous crops and state investment in agricultural extension. We introduce here six case studies on these contested visions from Burkina Faso, Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Mozambique, Rwanda and Tanzania. Dominant agricultural development approaches neglect differences across class, geography and gender relations as well as marginalise many smallholders. Nevertheless, the everyday practices of small-scale food producers in Africa may strengthen their abilities to navigate and influence agrarian change.

Topics & Concepts

VisionFood securityAgrarian societyIndigenousTechnocracyPolitical scienceGeographyAgricultureEconomic growthDemocracyScale (ratio)Development economicsEconomicsSociologyEcologyPoliticsBiologyAnthropologyArchaeologyLawCartographyAgriculture, Land Use, Rural DevelopmentAgriculture and Rural Development ResearchAgricultural Innovations and Practices
Food security and the contested visions of agrarian change in Africa | Litcius