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Community Organizations African Institute for Agrarian Studies
African Institute for Agrarian Studies
African Institute for Agrarian Studies
Acronym
AIAS
University or Research Institution

Focal point

Sam Moyo (Executive Director)
Phone number
+263-4-795877/708672

Location

19 Bodle Avenue
Eastlea
Harare (city)
Zimbabwe
Working languages
English

The Sam Moyo African Institute for Agrarian Studies was established as an independent Trust in 2002 to fulfil a need that had been observed through research, for a policy institute focused on addressing Africa's land and agrarian questions. The AIAS interacts with various organisations and countries to assist them in developing capacity for policy formulation and research. It also facilitates policy dialogue among governments, academics, civil society and others on land and agrarian development, especially the land rights of marginalised social groups.


 


AIAS is a regional organisation that seeks to influence land and agrarian reform policies through multidisciplinary social science research, policy dialogues, training, networking and information dissemination. The main focus of the AIAS is to mediate in the policy making processes so as to enhance rural livelihoods through an improved policy framework.

Members:

Resources

Displaying 1 - 4 of 4

Fast Track Land Reform Baseline Survey in Zimbabwe: Trends and Tendencies, 2005/06

Reports & Research
December, 2009
Zimbabwe
Africa

Chapters cover access to and distribution of land; land tenure, resource control, and conflicts; non-agricultural production strategies; agrarian labour processes and social relations; social services and reproduction strategies; local ‘grievances’ and social organisation; agrarian structure and class formation; emerging agrarian questions and politics.

Land Reform and the Political Economy of Agricultural Labour in Zimbabwe

Reports & Research
January, 2007
Zimbabwe
Africa

Provides a socioeconomic analysis of the pre and post fast track resettlement agrarian employment structure in Zimbabwe’s commercial farming sector. Finds that the extent of employment on farms prior to fast track has been overstated, while the re-absorption of former farm workers into the agricultural sector has been greater than previously understood. Job losses have not been as pervasive as widely claimed.