Africa Development
by CODESRIA
openjournathemelogo
Quick jump to page content
  • Main Navigation
  • Main Content
  • Sidebar

Africa Development
  • Current
  • Archives
  • Announcements
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Submissions
    • Editorial Team
    • Privacy Statement
    • Contact
  • Register
  • Login
  • Current
  • Archives
  • Announcements
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Submissions
    • Editorial Team
    • Privacy Statement
    • Contact
  1. Home
  2. Archives
  3. Vol. 47 No. 3 (2022): Africa Development: Special Issue on Agrarian Change, Food Security, Migration and Sustainable Development in Senegal and Zimbabwe
  4. Articles

Issue

Vol. 47 No. 3 (2022): Africa Development: Special Issue on Agrarian Change, Food Security, Migration and Sustainable Development in Senegal and Zimbabwe

Issue Published : December 11, 2022

10 - The Food Security, Employment and Migration Nexus in Zimbabwe Post-land Reform: A Gender Perspective

https://doi.org/10.57054/ad.v47i3.2681
Newman Tekwa
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0248-7073

Africa Development, Vol. 47 No. 3 (2022): Africa Development: Special Issue on Agrarian Change, Food Security, Migration and Sustainable Development in Senegal and Zimbabwe
Article Published : February 5, 2022

Share
WA Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Pinterest Email Telegram
  • Abstract
  • Cite
  • References
  • Authors Details

Abstract

Serious inequalities in asset distribution in many developing countries consistently remain a key driver of household food insecurity, high unemployment, poverty and, ultimately, rural outmigration. Yet, the employment-retaining capacity of agriculture and its counter to rural-urban, including international, migration has been proven in many contexts. The 2000 land reform programme in Zimbabwe saw between 12 and18 per cent of women gaining access to land in their own right. Using a transformative social policy approach, the article explores the extent to which land reform as a social policy instrument enhanced household food security and rural incomes and opened new employment opportunities for beneficiaries relative to non-land reform beneficiary households. Highlighting the migration-social-policy nexus, I argue for land reform as a restraint to not only rural-urban but also international migration. Data gathered through a mixed methods ethnographic approach, combining in-depth interviews and surveys, and analysed using a combination of qualitative and quantitative methods, indicates that access to agricultural land and water can not only reduce but reverse rural to urban, including economically driven, international, migration. This suggests that continuous agrarianisation, in the Zimbabwean context, remains one plausible pathway to tackle the triple challenges of household food insecurity, unemployment and rural outmigration. 

Keywords

household food security poverty unemployment migration land reform Zimbabwe

Full Article

Generated from XML file
[1]
Tekwa, N. 2022. 10 - The Food Security, Employment and Migration Nexus in Zimbabwe Post-land Reform: A Gender Perspective. Africa Development. 47, 3 (Feb. 2022), 223–251. DOI:https://doi.org/10.57054/ad.v47i3.2681.
  • ACS
  • APA
  • ABNT
  • Chicago
  • Harvard
  • IEEE
  • MLA
  • Turabian
  • Vancouver
Download Citation
Endnote/Zotero/Mendeley (RIS)
BibTeX
References
  1. Adesina, J., 2009, Social policy in sub-Saharan Africa: A glance in the rear-view mirror, International Journal of Social Welfare, Vol. 18, No. 1, pp. 37–51.
  2. Adesina, J., 2011, Beyond the social protection paradigm: Social policy in Africa’s development, Canadian Journal of Development Studies, Vol. 32, No. 4, pp. 454–470.
  3. African Development Bank (AfDB), 2016, Jobs for youth in Africa: Catalysing youth opportunity across Africa, African Development Bank, South Africa.
  4. Amanor-Wilks, D-E., 2009, Land, labour and gendered livelihoods in a ‘peasant’ and a ‘settler’ economy, Feminist Africa, Issue 12, pp. 31–50.
  5. Ataç, I. and Rosenberger, S., 2019, Social Policies as a Tool of Migration Control, Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, Vol. 17, No. 1, pp. 1–10.
  6. Ba, C. O., Bourgoin, J. and Diop, D., 2017, The fluidity of internal migration as an answer to local constraints, in Mercandalli, S. and Losch, B., eds, 2017, Rural Africa in motion. Dynamics and drivers of migration South of the Sahara, Rome: FAO and CIRAD, pp. 32–33.
  7. Borras, S., and Franco, C., 2010, Contemporary discourses and contestations around pro-poor land policies and land governance, Journal of Agrarian Change, Vol. 10, pp. 1–32.
  8. Bracking, S., and Sachikonye, L., 2006, Remittances, Poverty Reduction and the Informalisation of the Household Well-being in Zimbabwe, Working Paper No 45, Global Poverty Research Group, Oxford.
  9. Bryceson, D. F., 2002a, The scramble in Africa: Reorienting rural livelihoods, World Development, Vol. 30, pp. 725–739.
  10. Bryceson, D. F., 2002b, Multiplex livelihoods in rural Africa: Recasting the terms and conditions of gainful employment, Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 40, pp. 1–28.
  11. Burgess, R., 2001, Land and Welfare: Theory and Evidence from China, Department of Economics and STICERD, London School of Economics.
  12. Chipenda, C. and Tom, T., 2019, The generational question after land reform in Zimbabwe: A social reproductive perspective, African Journal of Economic Management Studies, Vol, 2.
  13. Chiweshe, M. K., 2015 Women and emergence of grassroots institutions on post- Fast Track Land Reform farms in Zimbabwe, Journal of Gender, Agriculture and Food Security, Vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 40–53.
  14. Choithani, C., 2018, Understanding the linkages between migration and household food security in India, Geographical Research, Vol. 55, No. 2, pp. 192–205.
  15. De Jager, N. and Musuva, C., 2016, The influx of Zimbabweans into South Africa: A crisis of governance that spills over, Africa Review, Vol. 8, No. 1, pp. 15–30. Dzingirai, V., Egger, E-V., Landau, L., Litchfield, J., Mutopo, P. and Nyikahadzoi, K., 2015, Migration out of poverty in Zimbabwe, Working Paper 29 September 2015, Migrating Out of Poverty Research Programme Consortium.
  16. FAO, IFAD, IOM and WFP, 2018, The linkages between migration, agriculture, food security and rural development, Rome.
  17. Africa Development, Volume XLVII, No. 3, 2022
  18. Hebinck, P., 2018, De-/re-agrarianisation: Global perspectives, Journal of Rural Studies, May, Editorial.
  19. Knoll, A., Rampa, F., Torres, C., Molina, P. B. and Cascone, N., 2017, The nexus between food and nutrition security, and migration: Clarifying the debate and charting a way forward, European Centre for Development Policy Management (ECDPM) Discussion Paper No. 212, May 2017.
  20. Laborde, D., Bizikova, L., Lallemant, T. and Smaller, C., 2017, What is the link between hunger and migration? International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) and International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). Lowder, S., Skoet, J. and Raney, T., 2016, The number, size, and distribution of farms, smallholder farms, and family farms worldwide, World Development, Vol. 87, pp. 16–29.
  21. Manamere, K. T., 2014, Majoni-joni – wayward criminals or a good catch? African Diaspora, Vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 89–113.
  22. Milone, P.and Ventura, F., 2010, Networking the Rural, the Future of Green Regions in Europe, Assen: Royal Van Gorcum.
  23. Mkandawire, T., 2004, Introduction. Social policy in a development context, in Mkandawire, T., ed., Social policy in a development context, Basingstoke: UNRISD/Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 1–33.
  24. Mkandawire, T., 2007, Transformative social policy and innovation in developing countries, The European Journal of Development Research, Vol. 19, No. 1, pp. 13–29. Mkandawire, T., 2014, Lessons from the social policy and development of South Korea: An interrogation, in Yi, I. and Mkandawire, T., eds, Learning from the South Korean developmental success: Effective developmental cooperation and synergistic institutions and policies, Basingstoke: UNRISD/Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 11–30.
  25. Moyo, S., 2011, Three decades of agrarian reform in Zimbabwe, Journal of Peasant Studies, Vol. 38, No. 3, pp. 493–531.
  26. Moyo, S., Chambati, W.,Murisa,T.,Siziba, D., Dangwa, C., Mujeyi, K. and Nyoni, N., 2009, Fast track land reform baseline study in Zimbabwe: Trends and tendencies, 2005/06, Harare: African Institute for Agrarian Studies.
  27. Moyo, S. and Makumbe, J., 2000, The Socioeconomic Environment and NGOs, in Moyo, S., Makumbe, J. and Raftopoulos, B., eds, NGOs, The State and Politics, Harare: SAPES Books, pp 7–20.
  28. Mutopo, P., 2014, ‘Belonging and rural livelihoods: Women’s access to land and non- permanent
  29. mobility at Merrivale Farm, Mwenezi District.’ Erdkunde, Vol. 68, No. 3 (July–September 2014), pp. 197–207.
  30. Mutopo, P., Manjengwa, J. and Chiweshe, M., 2014, Shifting gender dimensions and rural livelihoods after Zimbabwe fast track land reform programme, Agrarian South: Journal of Political Economy. Vol. 3, No. 1, pp. 45–61.
  31. Potts, D., 2010, Internal migration in Zimbabwe: The impact of livelihood destruction in rural and urban Areas, in Crush, J. and Tevera, D., eds, Zimbabwe’sExodus: Crisis, Migration and Survival, Cape Town: SAMP Publication.
  32. Tekwa: The Food Security, Employment and Migration Nexus in Zimbabwe 251
  33. Poulton, C. Davies, R., Matshe, I. and Urey, I., 2002, A review of Zimbabwe’s agricultural economic policies: 1980 –2000, ADU Working Paper, 02/01 March 2002.
  34. Raftopoulos, B., 2011, A Study on Migration and Remittances in Matebeleland, Zimbabwe, Cape Town: Solidarity Peace Trust.
  35. Rawal, V., 2008, Ownership holdings of land in rural India: putting the record straight, Economic and Political Weekly, Vol. 43, No. 10, pp. 43–47.
  36. Sadiddin, A., Cattaneo, A., Cirillo, M. and Miller, M., 2019, Food insecurity as a determinant of international migration: evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa, Food Security, Vol. 11, pp. 515–530.
  37. Scoones, I., Marongwe, N., Mavedzenge, B., Murimbarimba, F., Mahenehene, J. and Sukume, C., 2010, Zimbabwe’s land reform: Myths and realities, Harare: Weaver Press.
  38. Scoones, I., Marongwe, N., Mavedzenge, B., Murimbarimba, F., Mahenehene, J. and Sukume, C., 2012, Livelihoods after Land Reform in Zimbabwe: Understanding Processes of Rural Differentiation, Journal of Agrarian Change, Vol. 12, pp. 503–527.
  39. Sibanda, V. and Makwata, R., 2017, Zimbabwe Post Independence Economic Policies: A Critical Review, Saarbrucken: Lambert Academic Publishing.
  40. Stone, G. V., 2010, Malthus, Agribusiness, and the Death of the Peasantry, Current Anthropology, Vol. 42, No. 4.
  41. Tavuyanago, B., 2017, ‘Our fathers and grandfathers were born here...’: Shangaan eviction experiences from the Gonarezhou National Park, 1957–1968, Historia, Vol. 62, No. 2, pp. 46–67.
  42. Tekwa, N., 2020, Gender, land reform and welfare outcomes. A case study of Chiredzi district, Zimbabwe, PhD thesis, University of South Africa, Pretoria.
  43. Tekwa, N., and Tekwa, H., 2022, Gender, household food security and neoliberal decimation of the grain producing peasantry in Zimbabwe, in Mazwi, F. Helliker K. and Mudimu G. T., eds, Capital Penetration and the Peasantry in Southern and Eastern Africa – Neoliberal Restructuring, Heidelberg: Springer Nature.
  44. Tom, T., 2020, The wider vision of social policy: An analysis of the transformative role of the fast track land reform programme in Zvimba District, Zimbabwe, PhD Thesis, University of South Africa.
  45. Van der Ploeg, J. D., 2017, Differentiation: Old controversies, new insights, Journal of Peasant Studies, pp. 1–36.
  46. Utete, C. M. B., 2003, Report of the Presidential Land Review Committee, under the Chairmanship of Dr Charles M.B. Utete, Volumes 1 and 2: Main report to His Excellency the President of The Republic of Zimbabwe, Presidential Land Review Committee (PLRC), Harare.
  47. Zhou, G., 2000, Public enterprise sector reforms in Zimbabwe: A macro analytical approach, Zambezia, Vol. 27, No 2, pp. 195–219.
Read More

References


Adesina, J., 2009, Social policy in sub-Saharan Africa: A glance in the rear-view mirror, International Journal of Social Welfare, Vol. 18, No. 1, pp. 37–51.

Adesina, J., 2011, Beyond the social protection paradigm: Social policy in Africa’s development, Canadian Journal of Development Studies, Vol. 32, No. 4, pp. 454–470.

African Development Bank (AfDB), 2016, Jobs for youth in Africa: Catalysing youth opportunity across Africa, African Development Bank, South Africa.

Amanor-Wilks, D-E., 2009, Land, labour and gendered livelihoods in a ‘peasant’ and a ‘settler’ economy, Feminist Africa, Issue 12, pp. 31–50.

Ataç, I. and Rosenberger, S., 2019, Social Policies as a Tool of Migration Control, Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, Vol. 17, No. 1, pp. 1–10.

Ba, C. O., Bourgoin, J. and Diop, D., 2017, The fluidity of internal migration as an answer to local constraints, in Mercandalli, S. and Losch, B., eds, 2017, Rural Africa in motion. Dynamics and drivers of migration South of the Sahara, Rome: FAO and CIRAD, pp. 32–33.

Borras, S., and Franco, C., 2010, Contemporary discourses and contestations around pro-poor land policies and land governance, Journal of Agrarian Change, Vol. 10, pp. 1–32.

Bracking, S., and Sachikonye, L., 2006, Remittances, Poverty Reduction and the Informalisation of the Household Well-being in Zimbabwe, Working Paper No 45, Global Poverty Research Group, Oxford.

Bryceson, D. F., 2002a, The scramble in Africa: Reorienting rural livelihoods, World Development, Vol. 30, pp. 725–739.

Bryceson, D. F., 2002b, Multiplex livelihoods in rural Africa: Recasting the terms and conditions of gainful employment, Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 40, pp. 1–28.

Burgess, R., 2001, Land and Welfare: Theory and Evidence from China, Department of Economics and STICERD, London School of Economics.

Chipenda, C. and Tom, T., 2019, The generational question after land reform in Zimbabwe: A social reproductive perspective, African Journal of Economic Management Studies, Vol, 2.

Chiweshe, M. K., 2015 Women and emergence of grassroots institutions on post- Fast Track Land Reform farms in Zimbabwe, Journal of Gender, Agriculture and Food Security, Vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 40–53.

Choithani, C., 2018, Understanding the linkages between migration and household food security in India, Geographical Research, Vol. 55, No. 2, pp. 192–205.

De Jager, N. and Musuva, C., 2016, The influx of Zimbabweans into South Africa: A crisis of governance that spills over, Africa Review, Vol. 8, No. 1, pp. 15–30. Dzingirai, V., Egger, E-V., Landau, L., Litchfield, J., Mutopo, P. and Nyikahadzoi, K., 2015, Migration out of poverty in Zimbabwe, Working Paper 29 September 2015, Migrating Out of Poverty Research Programme Consortium.

FAO, IFAD, IOM and WFP, 2018, The linkages between migration, agriculture, food security and rural development, Rome.

Africa Development, Volume XLVII, No. 3, 2022

Hebinck, P., 2018, De-/re-agrarianisation: Global perspectives, Journal of Rural Studies, May, Editorial.

Knoll, A., Rampa, F., Torres, C., Molina, P. B. and Cascone, N., 2017, The nexus between food and nutrition security, and migration: Clarifying the debate and charting a way forward, European Centre for Development Policy Management (ECDPM) Discussion Paper No. 212, May 2017.

Laborde, D., Bizikova, L., Lallemant, T. and Smaller, C., 2017, What is the link between hunger and migration? International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) and International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). Lowder, S., Skoet, J. and Raney, T., 2016, The number, size, and distribution of farms, smallholder farms, and family farms worldwide, World Development, Vol. 87, pp. 16–29.

Manamere, K. T., 2014, Majoni-joni – wayward criminals or a good catch? African Diaspora, Vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 89–113.

Milone, P.and Ventura, F., 2010, Networking the Rural, the Future of Green Regions in Europe, Assen: Royal Van Gorcum.

Mkandawire, T., 2004, Introduction. Social policy in a development context, in Mkandawire, T., ed., Social policy in a development context, Basingstoke: UNRISD/Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 1–33.

Mkandawire, T., 2007, Transformative social policy and innovation in developing countries, The European Journal of Development Research, Vol. 19, No. 1, pp. 13–29. Mkandawire, T., 2014, Lessons from the social policy and development of South Korea: An interrogation, in Yi, I. and Mkandawire, T., eds, Learning from the South Korean developmental success: Effective developmental cooperation and synergistic institutions and policies, Basingstoke: UNRISD/Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 11–30.

Moyo, S., 2011, Three decades of agrarian reform in Zimbabwe, Journal of Peasant Studies, Vol. 38, No. 3, pp. 493–531.

Moyo, S., Chambati, W.,Murisa,T.,Siziba, D., Dangwa, C., Mujeyi, K. and Nyoni, N., 2009, Fast track land reform baseline study in Zimbabwe: Trends and tendencies, 2005/06, Harare: African Institute for Agrarian Studies.

Moyo, S. and Makumbe, J., 2000, The Socioeconomic Environment and NGOs, in Moyo, S., Makumbe, J. and Raftopoulos, B., eds, NGOs, The State and Politics, Harare: SAPES Books, pp 7–20.

Mutopo, P., 2014, ‘Belonging and rural livelihoods: Women’s access to land and non- permanent

mobility at Merrivale Farm, Mwenezi District.’ Erdkunde, Vol. 68, No. 3 (July–September 2014), pp. 197–207.

Mutopo, P., Manjengwa, J. and Chiweshe, M., 2014, Shifting gender dimensions and rural livelihoods after Zimbabwe fast track land reform programme, Agrarian South: Journal of Political Economy. Vol. 3, No. 1, pp. 45–61.

Potts, D., 2010, Internal migration in Zimbabwe: The impact of livelihood destruction in rural and urban Areas, in Crush, J. and Tevera, D., eds, Zimbabwe’sExodus: Crisis, Migration and Survival, Cape Town: SAMP Publication.

Tekwa: The Food Security, Employment and Migration Nexus in Zimbabwe 251

Poulton, C. Davies, R., Matshe, I. and Urey, I., 2002, A review of Zimbabwe’s agricultural economic policies: 1980 –2000, ADU Working Paper, 02/01 March 2002.

Raftopoulos, B., 2011, A Study on Migration and Remittances in Matebeleland, Zimbabwe, Cape Town: Solidarity Peace Trust.

Rawal, V., 2008, Ownership holdings of land in rural India: putting the record straight, Economic and Political Weekly, Vol. 43, No. 10, pp. 43–47.

Sadiddin, A., Cattaneo, A., Cirillo, M. and Miller, M., 2019, Food insecurity as a determinant of international migration: evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa, Food Security, Vol. 11, pp. 515–530.

Scoones, I., Marongwe, N., Mavedzenge, B., Murimbarimba, F., Mahenehene, J. and Sukume, C., 2010, Zimbabwe’s land reform: Myths and realities, Harare: Weaver Press.

Scoones, I., Marongwe, N., Mavedzenge, B., Murimbarimba, F., Mahenehene, J. and Sukume, C., 2012, Livelihoods after Land Reform in Zimbabwe: Understanding Processes of Rural Differentiation, Journal of Agrarian Change, Vol. 12, pp. 503–527.

Sibanda, V. and Makwata, R., 2017, Zimbabwe Post Independence Economic Policies: A Critical Review, Saarbrucken: Lambert Academic Publishing.

Stone, G. V., 2010, Malthus, Agribusiness, and the Death of the Peasantry, Current Anthropology, Vol. 42, No. 4.

Tavuyanago, B., 2017, ‘Our fathers and grandfathers were born here...’: Shangaan eviction experiences from the Gonarezhou National Park, 1957–1968, Historia, Vol. 62, No. 2, pp. 46–67.

Tekwa, N., 2020, Gender, land reform and welfare outcomes. A case study of Chiredzi district, Zimbabwe, PhD thesis, University of South Africa, Pretoria.

Tekwa, N., and Tekwa, H., 2022, Gender, household food security and neoliberal decimation of the grain producing peasantry in Zimbabwe, in Mazwi, F. Helliker K. and Mudimu G. T., eds, Capital Penetration and the Peasantry in Southern and Eastern Africa – Neoliberal Restructuring, Heidelberg: Springer Nature.

Tom, T., 2020, The wider vision of social policy: An analysis of the transformative role of the fast track land reform programme in Zvimba District, Zimbabwe, PhD Thesis, University of South Africa.

Van der Ploeg, J. D., 2017, Differentiation: Old controversies, new insights, Journal of Peasant Studies, pp. 1–36.

Utete, C. M. B., 2003, Report of the Presidential Land Review Committee, under the Chairmanship of Dr Charles M.B. Utete, Volumes 1 and 2: Main report to His Excellency the President of The Republic of Zimbabwe, Presidential Land Review Committee (PLRC), Harare.

Zhou, G., 2000, Public enterprise sector reforms in Zimbabwe: A macro analytical approach, Zambezia, Vol. 27, No 2, pp. 195–219.

Author biographies is not available.
Download
PDF
Statistic
Read Counter : 1632 Download : 262

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Table Of Contents

Make a Submission

Make a Submission

Language

  • English
  • Français (France)

Information

  • For Readers
  • For Authors
  • For Librarians

Africa Development

 

Providing a forum for the exchange of ideas among African scholars from a variety of intellectual persuasions and various disciplines.
ISSN :  0850-3907

Make Submission

Our Editorial Team

Godwin Rapando Murunga
Editor-in-Chief
CODESRIA Executive Secretary
sA-3XlIAAAAJ
 
Read More
 
Editorial Pick

Towards Understanding the Cameroon-Nigeria and the Eswatini-South African Border Dispute through the Prism of the Principle of uti possidetis juris Customary International Law

December 25, 2022
Hlengiwe Portia Dlamini et al.

Enjeux de la pédagogie contrastée de l’histoire dans les sous-systèmes anglophone et francophone pour les politiques mémorielles au Cameroun

November 29, 2022
Nadeige Ngo Nlend et al.

Modernisation minière, fragmentation sociale et création des anormaux en République démocratique du Congo

May 19, 2022
Emery Mushagalusa Mudinga et al.

Localising the SDGs in African Cities: A Grounded Methodology

November 19, 2022
Omar Nagati et al.

‘Ghanaian first’: Nationality, Race and the Slippery Side of Belonging for Mixed-Race Ghanaians

June 11, 2022
Karine Geoffrion et al.

Les facteurs historiques de la demande en tissus identitaires au Nigeria et en Inde,

February 25, 2022
Jocelyne Boussari et al.

The Impact of Agricultural Extension Service on the Uptake of Various Agricultural Technologies in Ethiopia

December 16, 2022
Mesfin Hiwot et al.

The Curse or Fertility of Land Clearing: How Migrant Labour Modified Gender-Based Division of Labour in the Southern Highlands of Tanzania

November 12, 2022
Angelus Mnenuka et al.

Genre et cyber-radicalisation au Sénégal et au Mali

May 12, 2022
Selly Ba et al.

Rethinking the Pan-African Agenda: Africa, the African Diaspora and the Agenda for Liberation

November 19, 2022
Moses khisa

Author Resources

  •    Author Guidelines
  •     Download Manuscript Template
  •   Review Process

SCImago Journal & Country Rank

Similar Articles

  • Jonas Awald, Lennart Wohlgemuth, 4 - Challenges for the Opposition and Democratisation in Tanzania: A View from the Opposition , Africa Development: Vol. 37 No. 2 (2012): Africa Development
  • Etanislas Ngodi, 2 - Gestion des espaces publics au Congo-Brazzaville : le cas des parkings , Africa Development: Vol. 36 No. 2 (2011): Africa Development
  • James Olusegun Adeyeri, Olayemi Jacob Ogunniyi, 6 - Conflict between National Interest and Human Rights: Britain’s Policy towards African Immigrants, 1960 – 2013 , Africa Development: Vol. 41 No. 4 (2016): Africa Development
  • Ollo Pépin Hien, 9 - Présentation de soi et techniques du corps : les élections Miss au Burkina Faso , Africa Development: Vol. 36 No. 1 (2011): Africa Development

<< < 32 33 34 35 36 37 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

 Address

Publication and Dissemination Programme
1046 Av. Cheikh Anta Diop P.E 11, angle Canal IV
P.O Box: 3304 Dakar, 18524, Senegal

 OTHER LINKS

  • Become a member
  • Publish a book
  • Publish on our journals
  • Online Library Catalogue
  • Purchase a Book

  Contact Info

+221 33 825 98 22/23
publications@codesria.org

 Social Media

   
© 2023 CODESRIA
Themes by Openjournaltheme.com
Themes by Openjournaltheme.comhttps://journals.codesria.org/index.php/adThemes by Openjournaltheme.com