Image from Google Jackets

Bettering their foods : peasant production, nutrition and the state in Malawi, 1859-2005 / Bryson G. Nkhoma.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: African humanities series | African humanities seriesEdition: First editionDescription: xviii, 215 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781920033941
  • 1920033947
Other title:
  • Peasant production, nutrition and the state in Malawi, 1859-2005
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • HD 9017.M272 NKH 2023 NKH 2023
Contents:
Introduction ---- Chapter 1: Early missionaries, white farmers, and African agriculture in southern Malawi, 1859-1882 --- Chapter 2: Colonial conquest, capitalist economy and peasant food production, 1883-1910 --- Chapter 3: Global food market, nutrition and contestations over peasants' food production,1910-1938 --- Chapter 4: The Second World War and food production in Malawi, 1939-1947 --- Chapter 5: Post-war state interventions in peasants' nutrition and food production,1948-1963 --- Chapter 6: Agricultural development, food production and nutrition in postcolonial Malawi,1964-2005 ---- Conclusion.
Summary: "Despite the long history of agricultural interventions globally, peasants from Malawi and beyond continue to face the challenge of sustainable food production and nutrition. Bettering their foods: Peasant food production, nutrition and the state in Malawi, 1859-2005 weaves together the political, social, economic, demographic, climatic, ecological and global developments that have informed the various food production and nutrition interventions to account for this development. By bridging the late precolonial, colonial and postcolonial periods, the book presents the history of Malawi through the lens of peasant agriculture, covering important themes such as state formation, slave trade, Christian missions, the colonial state, urbanisation, immigration, trade, conservation, the two World Wars, nationalism and decolonisation, Malawi under Banda's autocracy, African indigenous knowledge systems, rural development, and democratisation. The study, therefore, offers a critical textbook for undergraduate and graduate students of Empire, rural development, political transformations, economics, anthropology, and African history. For governments and NGOs, the book provides new insights into the dynamics of state interventions, food security, climate change, nutrition, gender, ecological change, and sustainable development. Unlike earlier studies, Bettering their foods contends that while capitalism disrupted local economies, it also made efforts (albeit limited) to transform African capacities to produce nutritious foods. The central drawback was that these efforts were mixed and limited by the derogatory attitudes the implementors had towards African practices. In making this argument, the study demonstrates the extent to which well-intended scientific projects are bound to fall short when providers fail to take into their equation the beneficiary communities, including their history, competitive interests and class diversities." -- Publisher description.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Barcode
Books in General collection Books in General collection Mzuzu University Library and Learning Resources Centre HD 9017.M272 NKH 2023 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 033763 Available MzuLM-033763

Includes bibliographical references (pages 173-197) and index.

Introduction ---- Chapter 1: Early missionaries, white farmers, and African agriculture in southern Malawi, 1859-1882 --- Chapter 2: Colonial conquest, capitalist economy and peasant food production, 1883-1910 --- Chapter 3: Global food market, nutrition and contestations over peasants' food production,1910-1938 --- Chapter 4: The Second World War and food production in Malawi, 1939-1947 --- Chapter 5: Post-war state interventions in peasants' nutrition and food production,1948-1963 --- Chapter 6: Agricultural development, food production and nutrition in postcolonial Malawi,1964-2005 ---- Conclusion.

"Despite the long history of agricultural interventions globally, peasants from Malawi and beyond continue to face the challenge of sustainable food production and nutrition. Bettering their foods: Peasant food production, nutrition and the state in Malawi, 1859-2005 weaves together the political, social, economic, demographic, climatic, ecological and global developments that have informed the various food production and nutrition interventions to account for this development. By bridging the late precolonial, colonial and postcolonial periods, the book presents the history of Malawi through the lens of peasant agriculture, covering important themes such as state formation, slave trade, Christian missions, the colonial state, urbanisation, immigration, trade, conservation, the two World Wars, nationalism and decolonisation, Malawi under Banda's autocracy, African indigenous knowledge systems, rural development, and democratisation. The study, therefore, offers a critical textbook for undergraduate and graduate students of Empire, rural development, political transformations, economics, anthropology, and African history. For governments and NGOs, the book provides new insights into the dynamics of state interventions, food security, climate change, nutrition, gender, ecological change, and sustainable development. Unlike earlier studies, Bettering their foods contends that while capitalism disrupted local economies, it also made efforts (albeit limited) to transform African capacities to produce nutritious foods. The central drawback was that these efforts were mixed and limited by the derogatory attitudes the implementors had towards African practices. In making this argument, the study demonstrates the extent to which well-intended scientific projects are bound to fall short when providers fail to take into their equation the beneficiary communities, including their history, competitive interests and class diversities." -- Publisher description.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.