Professor Helliker has co-edited two books published by Routledge Press (2018):
Edited by Kirk Helliker, Manase Chiweshe and Sandra Bhatasara
Edited by Kirk Helliker and Lucien van der Walt
Since the introduction of the fast track land reform programme in 2000, Zimbabwe has undergone major economic and political shifts and these have had a profound impact on both urban and rural livelihoods. This book provides rich empirical studies that examine a range of multi-faceted and contested livelihoods within the context of systemic crises. Taking a broad political economy approach, the chapters advance a grounded and in-depth understanding of emerging and shifting livelihood processes, strategies and resilience that foregrounds agency at household level.
Highlighting an emergent scholarship amongst young black scholars in Zimbabwe, and providing an understanding of how people and communities respond to socio-economic challenges, this book is an important read for scholars of African political economy, southern African studies and livelihoods.
Chapter 1: Introduction – Theorising the Political Economy of Livelihoods in Contemporary Zimbabwe
Sandra Bhatasara, Manase Kudzai Chiweshe and Kirk Helliker
Chapter 2: Livelihood Strategies of Urban Women: Emerging Evidence from Magaba, Harare
Takunda Chirau
Chapter 3: Livelihood Strategies in Harare: The Case of Low-Income Households in Budiriro
Tafadzwa Chevo
Chapter 4: Sex Work as a Livelihood Strategy in the Border Town of Beitbridge
Wadzanai Takawira and Kirk Helliker
Chapter 5: Migration-based Livelihoods in post-2000 Zimbabwe
Manase Kudzai Chiweshe
Chapter 6: Agricultural Production Systems of Small-Scale Farmers in Hwedza in the Context of Innovation Platforms
Innocent Mahiya
Chapter 7: Development NGOs – Understanding Participatory Methods, Accountability and Effectiveness of World Vision in Umzingwane District
Kayla Knight Waghorn
Chapter 8: A Critical Analysis of Community Participation at the Primary Level of the Health System in Goromonzi District
Rachel Gondo
Chapter 9: Climate Variability in Local Scales – Narratives and Ambivalences from Mutoko District
Sandra Bhatasara
Chapter 10: Livelihoods Vulnerability among Riverbed Farmers in Negande, NyamiNyami District
Felix Tombindo
Chapter 11: "Let Them Starve so that they ‘Hear’ us" – Differing Perspectives on Unresolved Land Occupations and Livelihoods at Mushandike Smallholder Irrigation Scheme, Masvingo District
Jonathan Mafukidze
Chapter 12: "Other People Inherit Property, But I Inherit People and Their Problems" – The Role of Kinship and Social Capital in Providing Care and Support for the HIV Infected and AIDS Affected, Chivanhu Informal Settlement, Masvingo Province
Loveness Makonese
Chapter 13: Insecure Land Tenure and Natural Resource Use in a Post-Fast Track Area of Zimbabwe
Takunda Chabata
Chapter 14: Fast Track Land Reform Programme and Women in Goromonzi District
Loveness Chakona and Manase Kudzai Chiweshe
For decades, most anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist movements identified radical transformation with capturing state power. The collapse of these statist projects from the 1970s led to a global crisis of left and working class politics. But crisis has also opened space for rediscovering alternative society-centred, anti-capitalist modes of bottom-up change, operating at a distance from the state. These have registered important successes in practice, such as the Zapatistas in Mexico, and Rojava in Syria. They have been a key influence on movements from Occupy in United States, to the landless in Latin America, to anti-austerity struggles in Europe and Asia, to urban movements in Africa. Their lineages include anarchism, syndicalism, autonomist Marxism, philosophers like Alain Badiou, and radical popular praxis. This path-breaking volume recovers this understanding of social transformation, long side-lined but now resurgent, like a seed in the soil that keeps breaking through and growing. It provides case studies with reference to South Africa and Zimbabwe, and includes a dossier of key texts from a century of anarchists, syndicalists, insurgent unionists and anti-apartheid activists in South Africa. Originating in an African summit of radical academics, struggle veterans and social movements, the book includes a preface from John Holloway.
Preface: at a distance from the state
John Holloway
1. Politics at a distance from the state: radical, South African and Zimbabwean praxis today
Kirk Helliker and Lucien van der Walt
2. Constructing the domain of freedom: thinking politics at a distance from the state
Michael Neocosmos
3. Back to the future: revival, relevance and route of an anarchist/syndicalist approach for twenty-first-century left, labour and national liberation movements
Lucien van der Walt
4. Prefiguring democratic revolution? ‘Workers’ control’ and ‘workerist’ traditions of radical South African labour, 1970–1985
Sian Byrne and Nicole Ulrich
5. Broadening conceptions of democracy and citizenship: the subaltern histories of rural resistance in Mpondoland and Marikana
Camalita Naicker and Sarah Bruchhausen
6. A feminist perspective on autonomism and commoning, with reference to Zimbabwe
Tarryn Alexander and Kirk Helliker
7. From Below: An Overview of South African Politics at a Distance from the State, 1917-2015, with Dossier of Texts
Compiled and edited, with introduction, by Lucien van der Walt
Last Modified: Wed, 16 May 2018 11:21:12 SAST