Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://ir.gzu.ac.zw:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/779
Title: The Socio-cultural Dynamics in Smallholder Irrigation Schemes in Rural Zimbabwe: A Case Study of Rupike Irrigation Scheme in Mavingo South
Authors: Nhodo Lloyd, Lloyd
Mafongoya, Owen
Dube Kiriana, Kiriana
Keywords: Sociological and Anthropological Approach
Sustainable Development
Lifeworlds
Issue Date: Apr-2014
Publisher: Journal of Sociology and Social Anthropology
Series/Report no.: Vol.2;No.2
Abstract: This treatise argues that instead of being the panacea to food security quagmires bedeviling communities, irrigation at Rupike is marred with a plethora of challenges due to differential lifeworlds. This has resulted in an impasse, which can only be solved by considering irrigation as a social issue. The study examines the socio-cultural dimension of irrigation and the politics of production, situating the sociological approach to irrigation. Although it interrogates the flaws associated with the technological and managerial approaches that are coalescing against the objectives of this program, it does not advocate a paradigm shift to irrigation. Accordingly, it values an interdisciplinary perspective that accommodates the perceptions and interests of all stakeholders. It opines that unless an interface analysis is adopted to bridge the impasse, the goal of sustainable development will remain elusive. The study was grounded in qualitative methodology and the Interface Analysis was utilized as the theoretical framework.
URI: http://ir.gzu.ac.zw:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/779
ISSN: 0976-6634
Appears in Collections:Staff Articles



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