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The Lost Harvest: A Zimbabwean Farmer's Reflection On Cost Of Land Reform

The Lost Harvest: A Zimbabwean Farmer's Reflection On Cost Of Land Reform in Chattanooga, TN

Current price: $9.99
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The Lost Harvest: A Zimbabwean Farmer's Reflection On Cost Of Land Reform

Barnes and Noble

The Lost Harvest: A Zimbabwean Farmer's Reflection On Cost Of Land Reform in Chattanooga, TN

Current price: $9.99
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Size: Paperback

This book is born from a haunting silence-the silence that descended upon a vibrant, industrious landscape in the Eastern Highlands of Zimbabwe. It is a reflection, not of politics or policy theory, but of the tangible, agonizing loss of a functional economic ecosystem.
For decades, the farm described in these pages was a powerhouse. It generated a multi-million turnover, funded a massive huge wage spend, and sustained a settled, thriving community of over 550 workers and their families, complete with a functioning junior school and clinic. It was a testament to the fact that high-value, sophisticated agriculture-producing everything from export-grade kiwi fruit to specialized seed potatoes-could flourish in post-colonial Africa.
Then came the Fast Track Land Reform Programme. Its objective was morally sound: historical redress and the economic empowerment of the landless. Yet, the implementation was catastrophic. The land was transferred, but the wealth-generating engine-the integrated management systems, the cold chain, the access to capital and credit-was violently severed. The result was not empowerment, but the widespread collapse of production, the scattering of skilled human capital, and the inevitable descent of the farm into a village of subsistence level agriculture.
This is the central paradox this reflection seeks to unpick: How did a policy intended to create wealth destroy it so completely?
This book is offered as three things:
A Record of Memory: It is a refusal to let the prosperity that was achieved-the detailed blueprint of complexity and output-fade away. We must remember the true cost of this loss.
A Technical Diagnosis: It moves beyond moral outrage to analyze the failure of systems: the indispensable role of property trust, the necessity of capital reinvestment, and the devastating fragility of global export chains when technical expertise vanishes.
A Universal Lesson: The tragedy of the lost harvest is not unique to Zimbabwe. It is a stark warning to any developing nation about the profound difference between political land transfer and the complex mechanics of commercial production. It teaches that stability, credit, and skilled human capital are more precious than the soil itself.
By examining the specific fate of this single farm, from its zenith to its ruin, we hope to find the hard-won wisdom necessary to rebuild-not just the yields, but the foundations of trust and enterprise that can revitalize commercial agriculture across the entire continent.
This book is born from a haunting silence-the silence that descended upon a vibrant, industrious landscape in the Eastern Highlands of Zimbabwe. It is a reflection, not of politics or policy theory, but of the tangible, agonizing loss of a functional economic ecosystem.
For decades, the farm described in these pages was a powerhouse. It generated a multi-million turnover, funded a massive huge wage spend, and sustained a settled, thriving community of over 550 workers and their families, complete with a functioning junior school and clinic. It was a testament to the fact that high-value, sophisticated agriculture-producing everything from export-grade kiwi fruit to specialized seed potatoes-could flourish in post-colonial Africa.
Then came the Fast Track Land Reform Programme. Its objective was morally sound: historical redress and the economic empowerment of the landless. Yet, the implementation was catastrophic. The land was transferred, but the wealth-generating engine-the integrated management systems, the cold chain, the access to capital and credit-was violently severed. The result was not empowerment, but the widespread collapse of production, the scattering of skilled human capital, and the inevitable descent of the farm into a village of subsistence level agriculture.
This is the central paradox this reflection seeks to unpick: How did a policy intended to create wealth destroy it so completely?
This book is offered as three things:
A Record of Memory: It is a refusal to let the prosperity that was achieved-the detailed blueprint of complexity and output-fade away. We must remember the true cost of this loss.
A Technical Diagnosis: It moves beyond moral outrage to analyze the failure of systems: the indispensable role of property trust, the necessity of capital reinvestment, and the devastating fragility of global export chains when technical expertise vanishes.
A Universal Lesson: The tragedy of the lost harvest is not unique to Zimbabwe. It is a stark warning to any developing nation about the profound difference between political land transfer and the complex mechanics of commercial production. It teaches that stability, credit, and skilled human capital are more precious than the soil itself.
By examining the specific fate of this single farm, from its zenith to its ruin, we hope to find the hard-won wisdom necessary to rebuild-not just the yields, but the foundations of trust and enterprise that can revitalize commercial agriculture across the entire continent.

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Find Barnes and Noble at Hamilton Place in Chattanooga, TN

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