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To contribute to contemporary rural development debates, the present thesis conducts a contextual analysis of rural development using Kenya as a case study from the colonial era to today. To perform the analysis, two critical trends in rural Africa are focused on: socioeconomic differentiation and rural income diversification, with a particular focus on large-scale farm employment. By pointing to these processes, the overarching aim of the thesis is to nuance conventional rural development theories. This is achieved by relating empirical livelihood changes to theories of agrarian change. Three main conclusions can be drawn from the findings. First, the poverty/wealth outcome of rural households' income diversification is shaped by socioeconomic and historical structures, which govern households' access to farmand off-farm incomes and, more crucially, their ability to successfully combine the two. Second, gender, conceptualised as the sex of the household head, does not necessarily affect the poverty/wealth outcome of income diversification. Against conventional theories, this thesis finds that social cleavages aside from gender affectdiversification patterns and rural incomes. It follows that conventional literature, which has largely studied smallholderdifferentiation through the lens of gender, will require revisions that allow such studies to more effectively incorporate other social cleavages. Third, after having elucidated processes of income diversification and differentiation, a few tentative rural development trajectories can be described. Despite the conventional belief in African historiography, the diversification toward rural wage labour in settler economies does not appear to have caused widespread rural poverty during the colonial era. Contrarily, regions that supplied the bulk of agricultural wage labour also had rising rural incomes and high uptake rates of cash crops. Since the post-liberalisation era, households have continued to derive a high share of income from off-farm activities;however, the associated rural change is ambivalent. Off-farm activities have low returns; furthermore, the majority ofhouseholds that have become highly dependent on access to off-farm income appear to be on a path similar to the'de-agrarianisation' thesis laid out by Deborah Bryceson and her co-authors, where diversification away from the farm is associated with high poverty rates. Yet, a minority of households (including women-headed ones) have been able to follow a more successful agricultural-based path where off-farm incomes are combined with commercial agriculture. This minority have followed a path of intensification (i.e., by applying more fertiliser and labour to small farms) and are thus less threatened by declining farm sizes.In sum, post-independence income diversification and differentiation in Kenya do not seem to correlate with dynamicrural development. Profit possibilities in agriculture are low, as evidenced by a decline in real farm incomes among all income classes, including richer farmers. Instead of accumulation through farming, richer households have increased their income diversification towards better-paid off-farm activities. Consequently, the richer-income classes do not seem capable of driving future rural development. Instead, differentiation among smallholder farmers appears to mainly result in the impoverishment of a large proportion of households without a parallel expansion of commercially oriented and dynamic middle and rich classes emerging from the smallholder sector.
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In: Pacific affairs, Band 43, Heft 2, S. 189
ISSN: 0030-851X
In: Studies in American Popular History and Culture
This project contributes to our understanding of rural Midwesterners and farm newspapers at the turn of the century. While cultural historians have mainly focused on readers in town and cities, it examines Midwestern farmers. It also contributes to the "new rural history" by exploring the ideas of Hal Barron and others that country people selectively adapted the advice given to them by reformers. Finally, it furthers our understanding of American farm newspapers themselves and offers suggestions on how to use them as sources.
This book draws upon selected, revised and edited papers from a conference of rural geographers from the UK, USA and Canada, held at the Universities of Plymouth and Exeter. It focuses on rural regions, which are facing conflicting demands, pressures and challenges, which themselves have far-reaching implications for rural space and society. Themes that occur throughout the book include agricultural change, environmental issues, rural communities, governance and globalization, and rural responses to these
In: Northeast African studies, Band 2, Heft 3, S. 98-104
ISSN: 1535-6574
In: Asian survey, Band 16, Heft 11, S. 1043-1063
ISSN: 1533-838X
In: Journal of international development: the journal of the Development Studies Association, Band 4, Heft 1, S. 111-112
ISSN: 0954-1748
In: The journal of developing areas, Band 26, Heft 1, S. 100-103
ISSN: 0022-037X
In: The journal of modern African studies: a quarterly survey of politics, economics & related topics in contemporary Africa, Band 29, Heft 2, S. 335-336
ISSN: 0022-278X
In: Scandinavian journal of development alternatives and area studies, Band 15, Heft 2
ISSN: 0280-2791
SSRN
Working paper
In: Futures: the journal of policy, planning and futures studies, Band 39, Heft 4, S. 363-379
In: International review of social history, Band 66, Heft 1, S. 49-83
ISSN: 1469-512X
AbstractThis article examines the sedentarization of transhumants in northern Greece within the context of the political, legal, social, and economic transformation of the region that occurred throughout the nineteenth century. Based on a wide range of primary sources, this research conducts a chronological survey of the local actors, events, and institutions with reference to a broader political and economic context. It emphasizes that, in the first half of the century, a provincial-elite regime and imperial policies did not create substantial change in transhumance. In the 1860s, however, economic transformations at both imperial and global levels did accelerate change in the region's land and labour regimes. In response, regional landholders began to institute sedentarization, adopting various legal and economic means based on strategies including negotiation, persuasion, and compulsion.