SQUATTERS, LAND SALES AND INTENSIFICATION IN MARIRANGWE PURCHASE AREA, COLONIAL ZIMBABWE, 1931–65
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 April 2003
Abstract
This article considers the different ways that Marirangwe purchase area farmers understood and used their farmland, resources and opportunities. In the pioneer period from 1931 to the 1940s, Marirangwe farmers favored extensive use of their land and its resources. However, as labor and capital opportunities changed, land became for some an expendable commodity. By the 1950s, the farmers' ability to generate capital through land sales paralleled the arrival of squatters in the area. With the help of these squatters and revenue from land sales, Marirangwe farmers prospered. This development, however, did not signal a change from the extensive farming habits of the pioneer period but rather a brief, and generally prosperous, period of specialization.
Keywords
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- © 2002 Cambridge University Press
Footnotes
- 8
- Cited by