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This edited volume systematically interrogates the Chinese investment presence in Africa, focusing on land and agriculture, mining and other infrastructural projects. In doing so, the form and extent of Chinese debt will be brought into perspective, with comparisons made to investments in Africa emanating from metropolitan capitalism. The volume examines the development potential of these investments by focusing on the labour regimes created and the effects of investments on the land-based agricultural livelihoods of the African peasantry. This entails the use of a political economy approach which incorporates the state, international actors and local communities into the analysis, with gender dynamics also of great significance. Overall, the contributions in this volume focus on an array of African nations (with a specific focus on Zimbabwe) and they deploy a large wealth of primary field-based data collected over a number of years by established and emerging scholars living andworking on the continent.
Engages with a multidisciplinary approach Relies on primary data covering multiple countries Analyzes the agricultural sector and infrastructure
Auteur
Freedom Mazwi is with the University of Cape Town, Department of African Studies and Linguistics. He holds a PhD in Development Studies obtained from the University of KwaZulu-Natal. His most recent co-edited books are: Capital Penetration and the Peasantry in Southern and Eastern Africa: Neoliberal Restructuring and Farming and Working under Contract: Peasants and Workers in Global Agricultural Value Systems (both published in 2022). He also single authored the book The Political Economy of Contract Farming in Zimbabwe (2022). Dr. Mazwi has been researcher at the Sam Moyo African Institute of Agrarian Studies in Harare and a Visiting Scholar at the Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study (STIAS) at Stellenbosch University.
George T. Mudimu is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Development Sciences at Marondera University Of Agricultural Sciences and Technology in Zimbabwe. His current research is on counter-agrarian reform, capitalism, food systems, and land (and rural) politics. From 2020 to 2023, he undertook a post-doctoral fellowship at PLAAS at the University of Western Cape, South Africa, under the SARCHL Chair on Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies. He also had an internship with the Sam Moyo African Institute of Agrarian Studies in 2018 and was a Research Fellow for the International Poverty Reduction Centre in China (in Beijing) in 2017 and 2018. He is also a book review co-editor for The Journal of Peasant Studies, a senior editor for Cogent Social Sciences and a member of the Collective of Agrarian Scholar-Activists from the Global South (CASAS).
Kirk Helliker is an Emeritus Research Professor in the Department of Sociology at Rhodes University in South Africa, where he heads the Unit of Zimbabwean Studies, which he founded. The Unit was formed in 2015 and seeks to contribute to the development of emerging, early-career and mid-career Zimbabwean (and other) scholars. Professor Helliker publishes widely on Zimbabwean history, politics and society and has supervised a significant number of PhD and MA students. His most recent co-edited books, all published in 2023, are: Tonga Livelihoods in Rural Zimbabwe; Lived Experiences of Borderland Communities in Zimbabwe: Livelihoods, Conservation, War and Covid-19; and Making Politics in Zimbabwe's Second Republic The Formative Project by Emmerson Mnangagwa.
Contenu
Chapter 1. Framing the Complexities of Chinese Investments in Africa.- Part I: Land.- Chapter 2. Chinese Agricultural Investments in Uganda and the Paradox of Idle Land.- Chapter 3. Land Displacements, Production Relations and Resistance in the Context of Chinese Investments in Mozambique.- Chapter 4. Problematising the Mutuality Discourse in Chinese Agricultural Investment in Uganda.- Part II: Agriculture.- Chapter 5. Complexities arising from the Role of Chinese Firms in the Renaissance of the Tobacco Industry in Zimbabwe.- Chapter 6. Narratives and Experiences of Chinese Agro-Investments in Zambia: A Case Study of Cotton.- Chapter 7. Chinese Agricultural Technology Demonstration Centre and Peasant Empowerment in Zambia: Discourse and Reality.- Part III: Mining and Infrastructure.- Chapter 8. An Analysis of China's Investments in South Africa's Mining Sector.- Chapter 9. Socio-Economic Impacts of China's Mining Investments in Zimbabwe.- Chapter 10. ContestedChinese Investment in Africa: The Case of Dam Construction in Upemba National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo.