<p>This article contributes to the contemporary debate on land and water grabbing through a detailed, qualitative case study of horticultural agribusinesses which have settled in Tanzania, disrupting patterns of land and water use. In this paper we analyse how capitalist settler farms and their upstream and downstream peasant neighbours along the Nduruma river, Tanzania, expand and defend their water use. The paper is based on 3 months of qualitative field work in Tanzania. We use the echelons of rights analysis framework combined with the concept of institutional bricolage to show how this contestation takes place over the full spectrum of actual abstractions, governance and discourses. We emphasise the role different (inter)national devel...
In the Uluguru Mountains of Tanzania, an expansion in informal hosepipe irrigation by small-scale fa...
In recent years, the trend for foreign actors to secure land for agricultural production in low-inco...
This research article published by Water alternatives Volume 5 | Issue 3, 2012Water transfers to gro...
This article contributes to the contemporary debate on land and water grabbing through a detailed, q...
In Tanzania like in other parts of the global South, in the name of 'development' and 'poverty eradi...
This research article published by Taylor & Francis Online, 2013Water scarcity caused by increased d...
Water transfers to growing cities in sub-Sahara Africa, as elsewhere, seem inevitable. But absolute ...
This paper presents a case study of large- and small-scale irrigators negotiating for access to wate...
Water transfers to growing cities in sub-Sahara Africa, as elsewhere, seem inevitable. But absolute ...
This research article published by Elsevier, 2012This paper presents a case study of large- and smal...
Water transfers to growing cities in sub-Sahara Africa, as elsewhere, seem inevitable. But absolute ...
Water transfers to growing cities in sub-Sahara Africa, as elsewhere, seem inevitable. But absolute ...
This paper presents a case study of large- and small-scale irrigators negotiating for access to wate...
In the Uluguru Mountains of Tanzania, an expansion in informal hosepipe irrigation by small-scale fa...
This paper presents a case study of large- and small-scale irrigators negotiating for access to wate...
In the Uluguru Mountains of Tanzania, an expansion in informal hosepipe irrigation by small-scale fa...
In recent years, the trend for foreign actors to secure land for agricultural production in low-inco...
This research article published by Water alternatives Volume 5 | Issue 3, 2012Water transfers to gro...
This article contributes to the contemporary debate on land and water grabbing through a detailed, q...
In Tanzania like in other parts of the global South, in the name of 'development' and 'poverty eradi...
This research article published by Taylor & Francis Online, 2013Water scarcity caused by increased d...
Water transfers to growing cities in sub-Sahara Africa, as elsewhere, seem inevitable. But absolute ...
This paper presents a case study of large- and small-scale irrigators negotiating for access to wate...
Water transfers to growing cities in sub-Sahara Africa, as elsewhere, seem inevitable. But absolute ...
This research article published by Elsevier, 2012This paper presents a case study of large- and smal...
Water transfers to growing cities in sub-Sahara Africa, as elsewhere, seem inevitable. But absolute ...
Water transfers to growing cities in sub-Sahara Africa, as elsewhere, seem inevitable. But absolute ...
This paper presents a case study of large- and small-scale irrigators negotiating for access to wate...
In the Uluguru Mountains of Tanzania, an expansion in informal hosepipe irrigation by small-scale fa...
This paper presents a case study of large- and small-scale irrigators negotiating for access to wate...
In the Uluguru Mountains of Tanzania, an expansion in informal hosepipe irrigation by small-scale fa...
In recent years, the trend for foreign actors to secure land for agricultural production in low-inco...
This research article published by Water alternatives Volume 5 | Issue 3, 2012Water transfers to gro...