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Policy and Practice in Rural Tanzania: Grazing, Fishing and Farming at the Local–Global Interface - cover image
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The White Horse Press

Policy and Practice in Rural Tanzania: Grazing, Fishing and Farming at the Local–Global Interface

  • Antonio Allegretti (author)
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Metadata
TitlePolicy and Practice in Rural Tanzania
SubtitleGrazing, Fishing and Farming at the Local–Global Interface
ContributorAntonio Allegretti (author)
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3197/63823481143229.book
Landing pagehttps://www.whpress.co.uk/publications/2021/09/21/policy-and-practice-in-rural-tanzania/
Licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
CopyrightThe White Horse Press
PublisherThe White Horse Press
Publication placeWinwick, UK
Published on2022-04-01
ISBN978-1-912186-26-6 (Hardback)
978-1-912186-62-4 (PDF)
Short abstractRural people(s) in contemporary Africa are often conceived of in terms of how to efficiently integrate them into international markets and global value chains; this book analyses the question of integration of rural people in Tanzania by delving into how they deal with local-global connections and engage with policy objectives on their own terms, between local forms of associational life and global markets
Long abstractWho are the rural people of Africa? What does it mean to be part of a ‘rural’ community in contemporary Tanzania? And why is it important to debate questions of African rurality beyond the mere GDP contribution of rural land-based production? This book seeks to address questions like these. Rural people(s) in contemporary Africa are often conceived of in terms of how to efficiently integrate them into international markets and global value chains; this book analyses the question of integration of rural people in Tanzania by delving into how they deal with local-global connections and engage with policy objectives on their own terms, between local forms of associational life and global markets. In so doing, it explores local socio-economic dynamics that find little space in the national and global policy vision of a rural sector geared towards growth – a vision that is peculiar to African states, including Tanzania. Informed by anthropological theory and de-re-agrarianisation/de-re-peasantisation debates, and grounded in ethnographic evidence, the book eschews ‘orthodox’ approaches that see (rural) people as passive recipients of policies, and policies as instruments of oppression. Instead, it departs from the rural land/place-based practices of grazing, fishing and farming to look at rurality in Tanzania as a blend of old and new meanings, values and practices at the local-global interface, continually reshuffled as rural people encounter different social and economic spheres. As the world rediscovers the urgency of questions connected to neo-colonialism and de-colonisation, this book brings to the forefront the position, worldview and ambitions of African rural peoples intersecting with international policy models, visions and objectives.
Print length208 pages
LanguageEnglish (Original)
Dimensions152 x 229 mm | 5.98" x 9.02" (Hardback)
Media14 illustrations
BIC
  • JHM
  • GTF
  • 1HFGT
BISAC
  • SOC002000
  • SOC042000
  • BUS092000
Keywords
  • Tanzania
  • policy
  • agriculture
  • fishing
  • rural people
Funding
  • Lancaster University
Contents

Preface

(pp. ix–xii)

    Introduction

    (pp. 1–23)

      Grazing: People, Methods, Fieldwork

      (pp. 24–26)

        Becoming Maasai in Tanzania: The Rise of Maasai Ethnic Identity and the Maasai Trader in the Market Economy

        (pp. 27–42)

          Respatialising Culture, Recasting Gender: Maasai Ethnicity and the ‘Cash Economy’ at the Rural–Urban Interface

          (pp. 43–58)

            ‘Being Maasai’ in Markets and Trade: Ethnicity-Based Institutions in the Livestock Market

              Fishing: People, Methods, Fieldwork

              (pp. 77–81)

                ‘We Are Here to Make Money’: New Terrains of Identity and Community in Small-Scale Fisheries in Lake Victoria

                (pp. 82–99)

                  Farming: People, Methods, Fieldwork

                  (pp. 101–104)

                    Drawing From The Science ‘Basket’: Farmers’ Embedded Knowledge And Technology Between Performance, Identity And The Agricultural Expert

                    (pp. 105–128)

                      Climbing the Vertical Chain: Which ‘Integration’ for the Rural Entrepreneur?

                      (pp. 129–144)

                        Making Policy: Recrafting Ethnographic Research for Participation

                        (pp. 145–165)

                          Conclusion

                          (pp. 167–172)
                            Locations
                            Landing PageFull text URLPlatform
                            PDFhttps://www.whpress.co.uk/publications/2021/09/21/policy-and-practice-in-rural-tanzania/Landing pagehttps://books.whpress.co.uk/10.3197/63823481143229.book.pdfFull text URLTHOTH
                            https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv2jn92j4Landing pagehttps://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv2jn92j4Full text URLJSTOR
                            https://archive.org/details/cae777fc-8739-4940-bac6-09fcb7c9a132Landing pagehttps://archive.org/download/cae777fc-8739-4940-bac6-09fcb7c9a132/cae777fc-8739-4940-bac6-09fcb7c9a132.pdfFull text URLINTERNET ARCHIVE
                            Contributors

                            Antonio Allegretti

                            (author)
                            Lancaster University

                            Antonio Allegretti (Ph.D. Manchester) is an anthropologist and a Senior Research Associate in the Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University. He works at the crossroads of development, academic and policy-oriented research in East Africa (Tanzania and Kenya), having spent many years working with rural communities of pastoralists, fishermen and farmers in the region. He has done academic research on rural livelihoods and economies and contributed to multi-stakeholder policy debates around community-based climate adaptation and resilience, and water management. His current work at Lancaster University focuses on governance of small-scale fisheries and the role of fish for food and nutrition security among vulnerable rural communities of East and West Africa.

                            UK registered social enterprise and Community Interest Company (CIC).

                            Company registration 14549556

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