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Prosperity in Rural Africa? addresses questions related to tracking economic development in poor rural areas in the face of scarce data. The chapters collect insights and experience into the dynamics of rural societies in Tanzania, demonstrating that economic data can render development in these regions invisible.
List of contents
- 1: Dan Brockington and Christine Noe: Understanding Long Term Change in Rural Tanzania
- Part 1: The Role of Assets in Understanding Social Change in Rural Tanzania: Theoretical and Methodological Reflections
- 2: Dan Brockington and Christine Noe: Assets, Prosperity and Data in Rural Africa
- 3: Olivia Howland, Christine Noe, and Dan Brockington: The Multiple Meanings of Prosperity and Poverty in Tanzania
- 4: Dan Brockington, Ernestina Coast, Anna Mdee, Olivia Howland, and Sara Randall: Assets and Domestic Units: Methodological Challenges for Longitudinal Studies of Poverty Dynamics.
- Part 2: Case Studies of Change
- 5: Monique Borgerhoff Mulder: Tracing the Relationships between Assets and Well-being in Complex Social Environments
- 6: Katherine A. Snyder, Emmanuel Sulle, Deodatus A. Massay, Anselmi Petro, Paschal Qamara, and Dan Brockington: Modern Farming and the Transformation of Livelihoods in Rural Tanzania
- 7: Christine Noe, Olivia Howland, and Dan Brockington: Women's Tears or Coffee Blight: A Gender Dynamics and Livelihood Strategies in Contexts of Agricultural Transformation in Tanzania
- 8: Dan Brockington: The Sesame Seed Cash Injection: Commodity-fuelled Asset Booms in Remote Rural Tanzania
- 9: William Östberg, Dan Brockington, and Joseph Mduma: Self-made Farmers and Sustainable Changea Entrepreneurs and Development in Goima and Mirambu
- 10: Vesa-Mati Loiske and Dan Brockington: Prosperity, Equality, and Power: Perspectives from Gitting and Gocho, Manyara Region
- 11: Agnes Andersson Djurfeldt, Ellen Hillbom, and Elibariki Msuya: Ricing Fortunes: Agricultural Growth, Farm Intensification, and Paddy Specialization in Two Tanzanian Villages
- 12: Stefano Ponte and Dan Brockington: Involution and Enterprise in Rural Areas. A Twenty-Year Perspective on Rural and Agricultural Change in Morogoro
- 13: Esbern Friis-Hansen: Rural and Agrarian Transformation 1984-2018 in Three Marginal Villages in Njombe Region, Tanzania
- 14: Cosmas Sokoni and Verdiana Tilumanywa: Exploring Long Term Changes in People's Welfare on the Uporoto Highlands, Mbeya District, Tanzania
- 15: Torben Birch-Thomsen and Esbern Friis-Hansen: Improved Livelihoods on Less Land: The Case of Ilambilole and Ikuwala Villages in Iringa Region, 1996-2017
- 16: Anna Mdee: The Urbanising Frontier, Change, and Continuity: Uchira 1996-2018.
- Part 3: Conclusions
- 17: Christine Noe and Dan Brockington: Telling the Stories of Asset Accumulation
- Epilogue: Doing Longitudinal Research
- Biographies of Principal Authors
About the author
Dan Brockington directs the Sheffield Institute of International Development at the University of Sheffield. He studied for his thesis at UCL with Kathy Homewood and has worked on aspects of natural resource management and livelihood change in East Africa based on long term fieldwork in remote locations. He has recently published (with Peter Billie Larson) The Anthropology of Conservation NGOs (Palgrave, 2018).
Christine Noe is currently an Associate Professor at the University of Dar es Salaam. She trained for her PhD at the University of Cape Town where she graduated in 2009. Her research and teaching are mostly on conservation and development politics, land tenure and rights, and rural livelihood changes. She has held fellowships with the Five College Young African Scholars program (University of Massachusetts), All Africa House (University of Cape Town), and the Visiting African Fellowship (University of Cambridge). Christine believes that strong collaborations are the foundation on which solid African scholarship can be supported.
Summary
Prosperity in Rural Africa? addresses questions related to tracking economic development in poor rural areas in the face of scarce data. The chapters collect insights and experience into the dynamics of rural societies in Tanzania, demonstrating that economic data can render development in these regions invisible.
Additional text
Overall, here is a conceptually, theoretically, and empirically rich combination of materials for the student of rural development ... This is a must-read for all who want to understand rural social change in Africa.