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Blair Rutherford, Farm Labor Struggles in Zimbabwe: the ground of politics. Bloomington IN: Indiana University Press (hb US$85 – 978 0 253 02399 5; pb US$35 – 978 0 253 02403 9). 2016, vii + 278 pp.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 July 2018

Joseph Mujere*
Affiliation:
University of Zimbabwejosephmujere@yahoo.co.uk
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Abstract

Type
Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 2018 

Since 2000, Zimbabwean historiography has been dominated by works on the Fast Track Land Reform Programme (FTLRP). However, the majority of these works have fallen into two broad categories; those who view the land reform as a success and those who view it as an ill-conceived and violent land dispossession. What has been lacking in this historiography are ethnographically well-grounded studies that transcend these dichotomies. This book does exactly that. Rutherford builds on his years of research on farm labour to provide a longue durée perspective on everyday struggles of farm labour from the 1990s to the post-2000 period. Using ethnographic data collected from Upfumi, a horticultural farm east of Harare, Rutherford is able to weave a rich and compelling narrative on the experiences of farmworkers, especially in the aftermath of Zimbabwe's FTLRP.

The focus of the book is on how farmworkers dealt with the ‘precarious livelihoods they forged out in the new agrarian landscape that has emerged in Zimbabwe since the massive, and often chaotic, land redistribution exercise that began in 2000’ (p. 1). The book also examines the processes through which ‘the practices and power relations of electoral politics became entangled in the configuration of livelihoods and social projects of an extraordinary farm labor struggle’ (p. ix). Rutherford critiques the dominant narratives used to understand agrarian struggles in postcolonial Zimbabwe which dichotomize between those ‘for’ and those ‘against’ the land reform. This framing, as he argues, misses the actual ‘ground of politics’. Rutherford goes beyond the two analytical lenses that look at politics as either oppressive or liberating to look at the place of politics in struggles for farmworkers’ rights and agrarian livelihoods.

Rutherford deploys gender as an analytical lens to weave a story of farmworkers’ struggles. He examines gendered relations on farms and how female farmworkers at Upfumi were subjected to various forms of gendered intimidation (p. 41). These experiences informed female farmworkers’ willingness and desire to be involved in farm struggles. Rutherford's work articulates the agency of women who have often been viewed as mere victims. The key narrative in the book is the story of how a group composed largely of women workers was able to engage in a labour struggle for a very long period until victory was won. The book demonstrates that ‘farm workers do not lack a form of agency but they just have a very different set of possibilities and perils operating through the changing concatenation of social relations, dependencies and power relations’ (p. 253). Rutherford also uses the concept of belonging to make sense of the everyday lives of farmworkers. He defines modes of belonging as ‘routinized discourses, social practices and institutional arrangements through which people make claims for resources and rights’ (p. 16). He argues that modes of belonging emphasize the relations of dependency through which livelihoods of farmworkers are forged. In particular, the book discusses citizenship and belonging in relation to the stereotype of farmworkers as predominantly people of foreign origin (mostly of Malawian descent) and without rural homes. The narratives of farmworkers’ struggles to acquire identity documents, for example, illustrate how struggles over citizenship and belonging continued to be part of the everyday challenges that faced farmworkers in the post-FTLRP period.

One of the strengths of the book is Rutherford's expert use of ethnographic data to reveal intimate details of governance, livelihoods and politics on the farms. But perhaps the book's greatest strength is also its weakness; arguably one of the weaknesses of the book is the author's close connection with the research participants. As he puts it: ‘I found myself in sympathy with the Upfumi farm workers, their mobilization of political support, and their ambitions for improving the rights of farm workers’ (p. 4). He spent close to fifteen years interacting with the farmworkers at Upfumi and gained their trust, which made him become a key ally in their struggles. Consequently, his illumination of the agency of the farmworkers in their everyday struggles is affected to some extent by his close connections with his research participants. In spite of this caveat, Farm Labor Struggles in Zimbabwe is an excellent ethnographic study of farmworkers in Zimbabwe and how they negotiated their belonging and carved out new livelihoods in the context of an agrarian revolution. This book should be on the shelf of anyone with an interest in land reform, farm labour, identity and belonging in Zimbabwe and beyond.