Abstract:
This study looks at rural livelihoods in semi-arid and arid rural areas in post-2000 Zimbabwe. The
decade-long socio-economic recession coupled with recurrent droughts presented a myriad of challenges to rural
households in Zimbabwe. Taking Mudzi, a rural district in Zimbabwe, as a case study, the study explores the
livelihood conditions and how households have managed to organize and cluster their assets to foster a living.
Coping and adapting a cocktail of political, economic, climatic and social vulnerabilities in severely low economic
potential communal areas of Zimbabwe requires elaborate skills in clustering, sequencing and reorientation skills in
a broad range of activities. Using three basic livelihoods research methodologies namely retrospective,
circumspective and prospective approaches, the research revealed that livelihood diversification in few effective
strategies allows coping and even accumulation in distressed environments. Petty business, livestock rearing and
networking are the core strategies being employed while crop farming and taking relief food are intermediate
strategies. The study demonstrated that given appropriate rural development policy, households are capable of
constructing their own robust sustainable livelihoods. Government policy constraints and inconsistencies in social
and economic spheres and political violence are the greatest impediments to resilient livelihoods. There should be
wide reforms on the political, economic and social sectors in the rural areas if poverty is to be reduced and
household coping and adapting strategies are to be enhanced.