The major argument of the article is that agrarian change is not a unilinear narrative based solely on the impact of global forces on agricultural producers. The behaviour of global capitalist forces is conditioned by the different responses of different elements within the ‘communities’ of agricultural producers, including their accommodations but also their resistances and struggles against both patriarchy and capitalism intertwined with different forms of imperialism/ globalisation These responses are not always self-evident nor predictable. The roots of the current phase of plunder of Tanzanian natural resources were established in the colonial era, and even before, in the major transformations that occurred in local economies in respon...
This brief presents a summary of key issues in research on women’s empowerment, drawn from an APRA w...
In 2007 the World Bank released the World Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development signi...
Statutorily supported rights to land and other landed resources are accepted as crucial in agrarian ...
This article analyses the rise of export-oriented horticulture in ‘post-socialist’ Tanzania, framing...
The subject of this dissertation is the negotiation of gender relations and ideologies in the matril...
This article argues that patriarchy expands capitalist accumulation by increasing surplus labour-tim...
Women in agriculture play a particularly important role in the economy. But their work—as peasants a...
Summary This article examines the relationship between women and men and their environment in an ar...
This article examines the social effects of contract farming of export horticulture among smallholde...
This seminar will provide an overview of 18 months of Ph.D dissertation research on the interplay of...
This article explores links between the issues of sexuality and gendered control over agricultural l...
This article historicises gender relations among Wampar speakers in New Guinea (PNG). It analyses th...
This study has the aim to analyze what impacts land grabbing in Rift Valley, Kenya, has on rural poo...
Contrary to scholarship that attaches matrilineal practices to women’s control and power over land i...
Summaries This article argues that the goals of social justice, poverty alleviation and gender equ...
This brief presents a summary of key issues in research on women’s empowerment, drawn from an APRA w...
In 2007 the World Bank released the World Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development signi...
Statutorily supported rights to land and other landed resources are accepted as crucial in agrarian ...
This article analyses the rise of export-oriented horticulture in ‘post-socialist’ Tanzania, framing...
The subject of this dissertation is the negotiation of gender relations and ideologies in the matril...
This article argues that patriarchy expands capitalist accumulation by increasing surplus labour-tim...
Women in agriculture play a particularly important role in the economy. But their work—as peasants a...
Summary This article examines the relationship between women and men and their environment in an ar...
This article examines the social effects of contract farming of export horticulture among smallholde...
This seminar will provide an overview of 18 months of Ph.D dissertation research on the interplay of...
This article explores links between the issues of sexuality and gendered control over agricultural l...
This article historicises gender relations among Wampar speakers in New Guinea (PNG). It analyses th...
This study has the aim to analyze what impacts land grabbing in Rift Valley, Kenya, has on rural poo...
Contrary to scholarship that attaches matrilineal practices to women’s control and power over land i...
Summaries This article argues that the goals of social justice, poverty alleviation and gender equ...
This brief presents a summary of key issues in research on women’s empowerment, drawn from an APRA w...
In 2007 the World Bank released the World Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development signi...
Statutorily supported rights to land and other landed resources are accepted as crucial in agrarian ...