After
a decade of political polarisation and international stand-off,
the debate on Zimbabwe
has finally been opened up to a wider reading public, thanks to
Mahmood Mamdani’s “Lessons of Zimbabwe”, appearing in the London
Review of Books (04/12/2008). Renowned scholars, within and
without Africa, have broken their silence and
have taken public positions. The debate now extends beyond a small
group of specialists in Southern Africa and the UK and also goes deeper into the issues than what
is readily available in the daily media. While we may wonder why
it took nearly a decade for this to happen, there is good reason
for the sudden change: during November-December 2008, Western governments
and associated think-tanks began to test publicly the idea of intervening
militarily in a small peripheral country and ex-colony, this time
under the pretext of the “right to protect” Zimbabweans from a crazed
tyrant. For many of us, this is dangerous talk; for others, it is
either not serious enough, or serious and overdue. It is no surprise
then that the knives would come out in the ensuing debate, and that
this would intensify with the prospect of forming an “inclusive
government” and resolving critical issues.
Mamdani’s
article set out from a simple premise: that Zimbabwe’s deeply unequal and racialised agrarian
relations were historically unjust and unsustainable. Restating
this premise was significant, because during the course of the crisis
the foundation of the debate kept shifting to other issues, such
as good governance, productivity, or even historiography. Mamdani
went on to argue that the radical land reform of recent years has
had various casualties, including the rule of law, farmworkers,
urban land occupiers, and agricultural production. But even so,
he argued, the land reform has been historically progressive and
is likely to be remembered as the culmination of the anti-colonial
struggle in Zimbabwe.
He concluded that similar, or even worse, convulsions are quite
possible elsewhere, for example, South
Africa, unless proactive measures are taken
there. Mamdani approached a complex issue calmly and methodically,
in stark contrast to the emotive analyses and distortions that we
see in the daily propaganda war. His article was followed soon after
by a public statement by 200 African scholars, attending a continental
meeting in Cameroon, who denounced Western sabre-rattling
and any plan to re-militarise Southern Africa.
Their statement was short, without detailed analysis of the Zimbabwe question, and written with the urgency
of resisting a dangerous escalation.
These
two statements were enough to blow the lid off. Concerned scholars of Zimbabwe
in the USA and
Europe scrambled to assert their expertise on the crisis, to label detractors as gullible
victims of Robert Mugabe’s anti-imperialist script, to
vilify the whole land occupation movement, and to equate it with
extreme human rights violations (Scarnecchia et al). Even scholars
on the Left, such as Patrick Bond and Horace Campbell, joined in
to dismiss the threat of external intervention as mere Mugabe rhetoric
and to dispute really existing imperialism in the country. Despite
their evident ideological heterogeneity, they converged instantly
around a shared focus on personalities rather than the issues and
resorted also to underhanded methods of argumentation (as noted
by David Johnson).
The
basic issue in Zimbabwe,
like in so many other ex-colonies, remains how to resolve the two
historic questions, the agrarian and the national. The issue of
democracy is intrinsic to both the agrarian and the national questions;
one issue can only be enhanced by the other’s advance. Let us recall
that in Zimbabwe, democracy itself was an historical conquest
against settler colonialism. But this democracy fell far short of
attending to the historic demands for social justice; instead, the
newly independent state began to defend privilege in the name of
rights and to criminalise demands for justice through the rule of
law. Thus, when the deep antagonisms of this society escalated,
civic organisations and ordinary citizens were faced with a confounding
dilemma: either to tolerate the suspension of the rule of law and
go for a historic breakthrough; or defend the rule of law and defend
perpetual inequalities and backwardness. In our case, we defended
the land reform not because we are “undemocratic”, but because we
believe in a deeper form of democracy, one that can only be set
on a more meaningful and stable footing by structural changes. Despite
the casualties identified by Mamdani, the land reform has indeed
created the social and economic foundation for a more meaningful
democratisation. There is need now to address the deficiencies of
the land reform process, to rebuild the hard-won democratic institutions,
and to lay the seeds for the next phase of the national democratic
revolution.
That
deep structural changes have taken place in Zimbabwe is beyond doubt. This has been established
by various studies undertaken by AIAS and associates between 2001−07
(see references on the social and economic outcomes). The only other
serious study published to date is by Ian Scoones and his associates
at the Institute of Poverty Land and Agrarian Studies (PLAAS) in
Cape Town. Taken together, these studies have shown that land reform
was not “hijacked” by “cronies”; although cronyism has indeed operated,
it has been marginal to the whole process. The land reform has been
broad-based and largely egalitarian. It has benefited directly 140,000
families, mainly among the rural poor, but also among their urban
counterparts, which on average have acquired 20 hectares of land,
constituting 70% of the land acquired. The remaining land has benefited
18,000 new small- to medium-scale capitalists with an average of
100 hectares. A small segment of large-scale capitalists persists,
including both black and white farmers, but their land sizes have
been greatly downsized to an average of 700 hectares, much lower
than the average of 2,000 hectares previously held by 4,500 landowners
on the whole of this land.
Moreover,
various new dynamics are underway in the countryside in terms of
labour mobilisation, investment in infrastructure, new small industries,
new commodity chains, and the formation of cooperatives. And despite
the adverse economic conditions, land utilisation levels have already
surpassed the 40% mark that prevailed on white farms after a whole
century of state subsidies and racial privilege. That the crop yields
remain low is largely due to input shortages, not the lack of entrepreneurial
spirit or expertise by the new farmers, as is so often claimed.
The new agrarian structure in Zimbabwe now holds
out the promise of obtaining food sovereignty (which it had never
obtained before), creating new domestic inter-sectoral linkages,
and formulating a new model of agro-industrial development with
organised peasants in the forefront.
Needless
to say, a number of scholars have never recognised this potential.
On the contrary, they continue to speculate about “crony capitalism”
(Patrick Bond) and the “destruction of the agriculture sector” (Horace
Campbell), without having conducted any concrete research of their
own, or properly interrogated the new research that has emerged.
Deep
structural change has been accompanied by recurrent state violence.
The most serious contradiction of the whole process has been the
shrinking of political space, especially for progressive social
forces. The state apparatus has continued to resort to brute force,
long after the land reform. In this regard, we have been accused
of turning a blind eye to state violence (see Brian Raftopoulos
and Horace Campbell). But this is not the case. To defend structural
change is not to condone murder, rape, abduction, and torture. Our
approach to state violence has certainly been different; we have
not chosen the path of listing the number of victims and moralising
about it. Rogue violence aside, our purpose has been two-fold: to
analyse the changing class character of state violence so as to
understand its function; and to provide concrete alternatives to
avoiding and resisting state violence.
We
have argued that in the early stages of the land reform (2000−03),
while the leadership of the ruling party was struggling to appease
and co-opt the land occupation movement, the use of force was used
in defence of the landless and against the political forces allied
to the white agrarian monopoly and Western interests. From 2003
onwards, as the land movement dissipated and as the enlarged black
capitalist class repositioned itself within the ruling party, violence
began to be used in defence of narrow class interests, but still
against the forces allied to the West. This led to a series of tragedies
between 2005 and 2008, especially as economic hardship deepened.
The leadership of the ruling party substituted mobilisation tactics
by quick-fix, military-style operations: first against “illegal”
urban dwellers (2005), destroying the new urban settlements that
had emerged during the land occupations; then against “illegal”
rural miners (2006−08), who had resorted to panning and smuggling
for their livelihoods; then against profiteers (2007), in a price-control
blitz whose effect was to further expand the parallel market; and
finally, during the presidential contest of 2008, against those
that the ruling party could no longer convince. Indeed, these ongoing
convulsions, combined with the economic hardship (see below), had
the effect of undermining the “vanguard” claims of the ruling party,
even in the countryside. This culminated in a deep and tense electoral
polarisation, with the opposition for the first time in the lead,
which could only be defused through power-sharing negotiations.
The violence (especially irregular detentions) has dragged on until
now.
What
were the concrete alternatives? It became very clear to us, as the
rural and urban land movements dissipated or succumbed, that neither
political party was capable of advancing the national democratic
revolution to the next phase: if the opposition was a lost cause
from the beginning, the ruling party had suffered a terminal class
shift. We suggested that the only way forward was for social movements
themselves to take the initiative, but not by contesting the
control of the state apparatus. We called for a retreat from
dogmatic party politics and a return to grass-roots political work,
with the objective to build durable and democratic structures in
the countryside, especially cooperatives, to build alliances with
urban workers, and to begin once again to change the correlation
of forces (Moyo & Yeros 2007a). For us, it seemed self-defeating
to stand up to the state apparatus on a neo-colonial platform, or
without adequate progressive alliances. For our detractors, however,
the platform of the opposition was not neo-colonial, it was progressive.
This,
in turn, has been among the most disheartening aspects of our colleagues’
work: their failure to interrogate the external factor and penetration
of Zimbabwean politics. Of course, as David Johnson has pointed
out, many of our detractors “don’t
see contemporary imperialism as a category for analysis” anyway.
But there are others who do, and they chose to abscond. Horace Campbell
and Patrick Bond, especially, have gone to great lengths to say
that “there are no sanctions on Zimbabwe” and that the economic decline is self-inflicted.
Indeed, they have given the impression that imperialism has suddenly
been suspended in the case of Zimbabwe. Scarncechia et al. have gone
even further to call Mamdani “dishonest” for attributing blame to
sanctions. This absurd chorus became complete when supposed ideological
adversaries claimed that the West is actually saving Zimbabwe:
“USAID was prolific in sending out its food support”, says Bond;
“Western food aid has been a lifeline”, say Scarnecchia et al.
The intrusive external factor is a constant in the history of Zimbabwe
and the continent. In the case of Southern
Africa, military, financial and diplomatic support for the white
minority regimes was crucial in dragging out the liberation struggles,
destabilizing independent states, and sealing neo-colonial transitions.
In the case of Zimbabwe, the Western achievement was to enshrine
the colonial regime of property rights in the new constitution of
1979. Thereafter, great effort was made by various means, including
via the IMF and World Bank, to co-opt internal politics in favour
of structural adjustment. And
then, in the early 1990s, when structural adjustment was at its
height, and when the rest of Southern Africa was making a transition
to majority rule, the USA tried to re-establish its military presence
in the region, initially in Zimbabwe,
and partially succeeded by building an air strip in Botswana. It should have been expected, therefore,
that relations would heat up in the late 1990s, when Zimbabwe abandoned
structural adjustment in 1996, initiated extensive compulsory land
acquisition in 1997, mobilized Angola and Namibia in 1998 to intervene
against the US-sponsored invasion of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) by Rwanda and Uganda, and finally turned on
its neo-colonial constitution in 2000. This was a major shift in
the correlation of forces. Did the West really turn the other cheek
at this point, as Campbell and Bond seem to suggest?
On the contrary, this is when destabilisation was deployed anew. Mamdani
has given a taste of this destabilisation campaign, and we have
also written about it (Moyo & Yeros 2007b and forthcoming a,
b; see also Gregory Elich and Stephen Gowans). In short, Western
capital went on strike, citing the lack of “investor confidence”,
while Western governments dedicated themselves to financing the
opposition. Suffice it to say that the combination of economic isolation
and political penetration has been severe, giving rise to a war
economy, with extreme shortages of foreign exchange and basic goods
and inputs, unrelenting hyperinflation, loss of productive capacity,
and under-investment in social infrastructure, leading more recently
to a very deadly cholera outbreak.
Many
of our critics have sought to bolster their argument that there
are no sanctions on Zimbabwe
by pointing out the signing of new contracts in the mining industry.
But whatever new contracts are being signed with Western, Eastern,
or South African firms, they are slow in coming and a drop in the
bucket. At the same time, the “food aid” that is being provided,
and which has been hailed as a “lifeline”, must also be interrogated:
this policy is in fact the corollary of a donor boycott against
newly resettled areas; food aid would not have been necessary if
inputs constraints had been lifted in these areas.
The
Zimbabwean state confronted this destabilisation campaign by becoming
the most dirigist in the world. It intervened across all
sectors of the economy to control prices, distribution and credit,
to nationalise land, to reassert control over natural resources
and export revenues, and to impose majority control by indigenous
capital over the mining sector. Its economic strategy has included
the resurrection of state-owned enterprises to direct the recovery
and to diversify trade and investment to the East. But its overall
approach has been to fight the siege by promoting an indigenous bourgeoisie. This has been
the basic internal contradiction which, besides its violent
political outcomes, has opened the way for the financialisation
and informalisation of business activity, the entrenchment of speculative
interests, the profiteering by capitalists all around (white, black,
ZANU-PF, MDC), and the excessive printing of money, all too often
applied in the interest of the larger capitalists.
It
is clear that the heterodox strategy has been insufficient
and incoherent, creating a playground for opportunistic behaviour.
To be sure, the realities of isolation and penetration, combined
with serial droughts and irregular rainfall, would have challenged
any heterodox plan. Moreover, the fact that regional partners did
not go far enough to provide economic support has also complicated
the economic environment. But even so, the heterodox policy itself
has been insufficient, in that it has lacked ideological clarity
from the beginning and has also failed to rise to the occasion in
the course of radicalisation. To take one basic example, the financial
system should have been more thoroughly regulated from the outset,
together with agrarian capital. This should have been seen as a
prerequisite for the promotion of a whole series of politically
defensive and economically developmental measures, from the financing
of cooperatives in the countryside to the expansion of urban housing.
Another example is the stock market, which became a hothouse of
financial opportunism, and was only regulated in late 2008. The
policy framework has also been incoherent in that it has not made
effective use of the market mechanism. Economic policy has relied
on the wrong capitalists, the speculators as opposed to the producers,
and bypassed the vast majority of producers, who are peasants. However,
we must be clear that none of this is a problem of “patrimonialism”,
as our detractors claim − a problem which could be eradicated
by “regime change”. The insufficiency and incoherence of economic
policy is a reflection of the changing balance of class forces in
the country and the weakness of urban and rural working-class organisations
themselves. Regime change will not change this fact.
Suffice
it to conclude with three issues that must now concern all genuine
democrats: (a) the need for an economic recovery that is sovereign
and socially just; (b) the opening of political space, in form and
substance, for the re-organisation and expression of the popular
will, especially of the urban workers and small peasant producers;
and (c) the fortification of the autonomy of the region by devising
mechanisms of financial self-help.
In
the course of the power-sharing negotiations in late 2008, various
think-tanks and donors − including a multi-donor trust fund
managed by the World Bank and a donor group called the “Fishmongers”
− began to discuss the issue of economic recovery. The UNDP,
however, took the lead and proposed that Zimbabwe
should readjust to the world economy by means of shock therapy.
This was an astounding conclusion, not only because the UNDP had
previously distanced itself from IMF and World Bank orthodoxy, but
also because shock therapy has been completely discredited worldwide,
and because the world economy itself is collapsing. To what exactly
should Zimbabwe adjust? As outlandish as it is, we nonetheless
take this talk very seriously as well. Indeed, the greatest danger
now is of an elite power-sharing pact that re-subordinates Zimbabwe to parasitical
international financiers and off-loads the costs of recovery onto
the peasants and workers.
What
is the alternative?
First,
as Ben Cousins has also pointed out, peasant production should be
made the pillar of the economic recovery, through subsidised inputs,
fair prices, and secure tenure (which does not mean freehold).
Second,
economic recovery requires a comprehensive framework for achieving
food sovereignty for the country as a whole, not only for the rural
producers on a “subsistence” basis. This requires the technical
upgrading of agriculture under the control of an organised peasantry
and the revival of agro-industries. It also requires the resolution
of the farmworker question, an underclass of “cheap labour”, which
remains to be allocated land on an equal basis, freed from labour
tenancy, and which needs to be incorporated into a cooperativist
and social protection system.
Third,
trade and industrial policy should be reformulated to secure the
recovery of strategic industries and their re-orientation to wage
goods and to the technical upgrading of agriculture.
Fourth,
the mining sector must also be guarded closely, as this is crucial
to the earning of foreign exchange and public revenue. The regulation
of this sector must continue to ensure that the mines are not sold
to the highest briber and that the revenues are reinvested locally.
Finally,
state banks should be given the leading role in the economic recovery,
given that the private banking system has not played its part, and
is unlikely to do so. What is necessary, now more than ever, is
a credit system that directs productive and compatible investments
to agriculture, industry, housing, and infrastructure. Such a policy
would be in line with emerging trends around the world, including
the re-positioning of state banks (and even the nationalisation
of banks) in South America and the recent state interventions in
the banking system in the USA
and Europe.
Of
course, many of our colleagues will again protest: the possibility
of a heterodox recovery without IMF funding is naïve! But we would
be naïve to believe that an external injection of finance, such
as has been promised on the condition of “regime change”, will be
delivered as promised. Zimbabweans will be made to beg for each
tranche each day, while new conditions will continue to be invented
long after regime change. This is a story we know too well. Moreover,
we should bear in mind that aid resources have dwindled, and will
dwindle further.
The
most recent changes in economic policy indicate that policy-making
is at a dead end. The ruling party has generally resisted normalisation
with international finance, but it has now endorsed “dollarisation”
and has also removed price and foreign currency controls. The policy
change has formalised the loss of control over monetary and exchange
rate policies in the hyperinflationary environment, but, ironically,
it has also sought to retain an element of sovereignty by avoiding
a wholesale return to the Bretton Woods institutions and the serial
imposition of policy conditions. Its specific objective has been
to improve the conditions for non-Western capital investments and
to cajole domestic capitalists. Nonetheless, this policy alone can
hardly be socially just, given that the poor are virtually shut
out of a highly iniquitous hard currency market.
The
opening of a political space for the re-organisation and expression
of the popular will is fundamental to the tilting of state power
back to a sovereign and socially just economic programme. This does
require inclusive government, which has now been realised, but not
any kind of inclusive government. Contrary to what has been suggested
(see Bracking & Cliffe 2008), the character of this government
is still open to dispute. Of course, many have argued that the removal
of Robert Mugabe and his replacement by Morgan Tsvangirai is the
precondition for the re-opening of political space and “effective”
economic policy. But Mugabe’s removal would by no means guarantee
the re-opening of political space, given that the opposition has
been consistently clear about its support for an extroverted recovery
programme, which in turn could only be implemented on the back of
a new round of political repression.
Defenders
of “regime change” have sought to support their partisan argument
by taking refuge in myths about the “progressive” nature of the
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), or of “progressive tendencies”
within the MDC. “The MDC and most in civil society have formally
opposed Western-style sanctions”, declares Bond. But they never
put up a fight, and this is because their main electoral strategy
has always been to drive the economy into the ground, not to organise
the working class on a working-class platform. “Zimbabweans who want transformation must oppose the
neo-liberal forces within the MDC”, Campbell
tells us. But who are these opposing forces within the MDC? And
why should we expect them to bite the hand that feeds them? And
if they did so, why should we expect them to be spared of a new
round of destabilization? For us, the task remains for social forces,
including the trade unions and farmers’ organizations, to step back from their political party alliances and resist a return to an elite
pact and IMF tutelage.
Such
a strategy, finally, has a very specific foreign policy, which is
to prevent the issue of aid and recovery from being transferred
to the United Nations, the IMF, and the World Bank, and to resist
the marginalisation of the working peoples through superficial consultancy
advice and ineffective “dialogues” with civil society. Discussions
of aid and recovery must remain under the control of Zimbabweans,
within the Southern African Development Community (SADC) framework. The latter must now reinforce
its strategic autonomy by devising mechanisms of financial self-help
and a regional integration scheme based on equality, solidarity
and strategic planning. This too, is in line with progressive initiatives
elsewhere, especially in South America.
In
fact, the least noticed aspect of the Zimbabwe question is the regional dynamic that
has emerged towards the construction of a strategically autonomous
region. To be sure, SADC regionalism remains deeply contradictory.
On the one hand, a SADC Free Trade Agreement is now in motion, together
with a plan to create a common currency (in which Zimbabwe has expressed interest). Although these
developments have been hailed as breakthroughs, their reliance on
market power and functionalist logic is most likely to backfire,
by reinforcing unequal development in the region and harming solidarity.
On
the other hand, SADC now counts on a mutual defence pact, a rare
if not unique achievement in the South. This pact was pioneered
by Zimbabwe,
Angola and Namibia in 1998, at the outset of the DRC intervention,
and was extended to the rest of SADC in 2003. This new strategic
posture is based on the principles of equality and solidarity and,
thus, runs contrary to the functionalist logic of the economic integration
underway. For this reason, we believe there is much more at stake
now in Zimbabwe than our
critics recognise − and imperialism knows it. A critical aspect
of this is the ongoing East-West scramble for minerals and energy
throughout the region. No wonder the destabilisation campaign has
also taken aim at SADC, putting pressure on member-states (particularly
Botswana, Zambia
and Tanzania) and trying to undermine SADC solidarity.
Nonetheless,
SADC has repeatedly and successfully denied the West direct involvement
in the negotiations. Indeed, the intensity of the destabilisation
campaign against Zimbabwe
and the dirty tactics against SADC have forced regional members
to look into the mirror and realise that they share something very
valuable: a common sovereignty regime, conquered collectively by
heroic sacrifices and struggles against imperialism. Thus, while
SADC members continue to cling to the logic of the market, they
have also judged correctly that what the West really wants in Zimbabwe is the total
dismantling of black nationalism, the total defeat of an integration
scheme that is strategically impervious, and the wholesale return
to the dark ages of neo-colonialism. This has finally yielded an
agreement on an inclusive government, which the West views sceptically
and continues to threaten with the “stick” of sanctions.
Some
of our critics continue to see all this differently. They believe
that the inclusive government is evidence that the region lacks
the nerve to stand up to tyranny. We believe it is a step forward:
there is a realization in the region that only a political project
that upholds regional autonomy in the face of external imposition
will succeed in marshalling internal forces to wage a consistent
struggle for democratisation.
BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentators, Professor Sam Moyo is Executive Director of the
African Institute
for Agrarian Studies, Harare, Zimbabwe; Dr Paris Yeros is Adjunct
Professor of International Relations at the Catholic University
of Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil. Click here
to contact Professor Moyo and Dr. Yeros.
Bibliographical Note
For
letters in response to Mahmood Mamdani (http://www.lrb.co.uk/v30/n23/mamd01_.html),
see Terence Ranger, http://www.lrb.co.uk/v30/n24/letters.html#letter1;
Timothy Scarnecchia, Jocelyn Alexander and 33 other scholars, http://www.lrb.co.uk/v31/n01/letters.html;
Gavin Kitching, http://www.lrb.co.uk/v31/n01/letters.html;
Horace Campbell, “Mamdani, Mugabe and the African Scholarly Community”,
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/52845;
Patrick Bond, http://links.org.au/node/815/9693;
Ben Cousins (2008), “Reply
to Mamdani”, unpublished; David Johnson (2008), “Mamdani, Moyo and Deep Thinkers of Zimbabwe”,
unpublished.
On the social and economic outcomes of the land reform, see
Sam Moyo & Paris Yeros (2005), “Land Occupations and Land Reform
in Zimbabwe: Towards the National Democratic Revolution”, in Reclaiming the Land: The Resurgence of Rural Movements
in Africa, Asia and Latin America, edited by S. Moyo
and P. Yeros, London: Zed Books; Walter Chambati & Sam Moyo (2003), Fast
Track Land Reform and the Political Economy of Farm Workers in Zimbabwe,
Harare: AIAS Monograph Series; Sukume, C and Moyo, S. 2003. Farm Sizes, decongestion and land use:
Implications of the Fast Track Land Redistribution Programme in
Zimbabwe, AIAS Mimeo; Sam Moyo (forthcoming): The Contemporary Land Question and Prospects for
Agrarian Reform in Zimbabwe. Sam Moyo (2007), Zimbabwe’s
land reform: way forward. Food Files Magazine ActionAid. October
2007; Sam Moyo (2004) The overall impact of the Fast
Track Land Reform
Programme, AIAS monograph. 2004; Sam Moyo (2003) Land redistribution:
Allocation and beneficiaries, mimeo. Sam Moyo and Prosper matondi
(2003), Agricultural Production Targets, AIAS mimeo; Walter Chambati (2007), Emergent Agrarian Labour Relations in
New Resettlement Areas, Zvimba District, Harare:
AIAS Monograph Series; Sam Moyo (2007), Emerging
Land Tenure Issues in Zimbabwe, Harare: AIAS Monograph Series; Tendai
Murisa (2007), Social Organization and Agency in
the Newly Resettled Areas of Zimbabwe: The Case of Zvimba District,
Harare: AIAS Monograph Series; Wilbert Sadomba (2008), War
Veterans in Zimbabwe’s Land Occupations: Complexities of a Liberation
Movement in an African Post-colonial Settler Society, PhD Thesis,
Wageningen University; and Ian Scoones (2008), “A New Start for Zimbabwe?”,
http://www.lalr.org.za.
On the politics of the land reform and the character of the
state, see Sam Moyo & Paris Yeros (2005), “Land Occupations
and Land Reform in Zimbabwe”, op. cit.; Sam Moyo & Paris
Yeros (2007a), “The Radicalised State: Zimbabwe’s Interrupted Revolution”,
Review of African Political Economy, 111; Sam Moyo &
Paris Yeros (2007b), “The Zimbabwe Question and the Two Lefts”,
Historical Materialism, vol.
14, no. 4; Sam Moyo & Paris Yeros (forthcoming, a), “After Zimbabwe:
State, Nation and Region in Africa”, in The National Question Today: The Crisis of Sovereignty in Africa,
Asia and Latin America, edited by S. Moyo, P. Yeros &
J. Vadell; Wilbert Sadomba (2008), War Veterans in Zimbabwe’s
Land Occupations, op. cit.; Amanda Hammar & Brian
Raftopoulos (2003), “Zimbabwe’s Unfinished Business: Rethinking
Land, State and Nation”, in Zimbabwe’s Unfinished Business: Rethinking
Land, State and Nation in the Context of Crisis, edited by A.
Hammar, B. Raftopoulos & S. Jensen, Harare: Weaver Press.
On
the international politics of the Zimbabwe question, see Sam Moyo
& Paris Yeros (forthcoming, b), “Delinking in Crisis: The Resurgence
of Radical Nationalism in the South Atlantic”; Sam Moyo & Paris
Yeros (2007b), “The Zimbabwe Question and the Two Lefts”, op.
cit.; Gregory Elich, “Zimbabwe Under Siege”, Swans Commentary,
http://www.swans.com/library/art8/elich004.html;
Ian Phimister & Brian Raftopoulos (2004), “Mugabe, Mbeki and
the Politics of Anti-Imperialism”, Review of African Political
Economy, 101; Horace Campbell (2008), “The Zimbabwean Working
Peoples: Between a Political Rock and an Economic Hard Place”, www.concernedafricascholars.org/author/horace-g-campbell; and Stephen Gowans
(2008), “Cynicism
as a Substitute for Scholarship”,
http://gowans.wordpress.com/2008/12/30/cynicism-as-a-substitute-for-scholarship/.
On
the economic recovery, see UNDP
(2008), Comprehensive Economic Recovery in Zimbabwe: A Discussion
Document, Harare; Sarah Bracking & Lionel Cliffe (2008),
Plans for a Zimbabwe Aid Package: Blueprint for Recovery or Shock
Therapy Prescription for Liberalisation?, mimeo.; M. Lupey (2008),
A Four Step Recovery Plan for Zimbabwe, CATO, www.cato.org; Adam Smith International
(2007), 100 Days: An Agenda for Government and Donors in a new
Zimbabwe, Fragile States and Post Conflict Series.
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