Book Description
In 1975, the Front for the Liberation of Mozambique (Frelimo) led the country to independence after a ten-year guerilla war against Portuguese colonial rule. Peasants were essential to the victory, but once in power Frelimo evolved from a popular liberation movement into a bureaucratic one-party state whose policies proved to be as inimical to the peasantry as those of the Portuguese colonial regime. These policies not only characterized the socialist phase of Frelimo rule; they continued during the period of economic and political reform that took place in the 1990s under the auspices of the International Monetary Fund. Merle L. Bowen's book offers a fresh assessment of the impact that such policies, pursued by postindependence states and NGOs alike, have had on the peasantry and agricultural production in Africa. In contrast to accounts that blame the state, the elite, or the peasantry itself for the agricultural crisis in posHColonial Africa, Bowen argues that Mozambique's decline in production is rooted in policies established during colonialism and continued by Frelimo. By tracing shifts in policy over a longer period than previous studies and across changing regimes, Bowen provides solid evidence that the continuation of colonial policies under the Frelimo government alienated the peasantry and contributed to internal conflict. Bowen refuses to treat the peasantry as a homogeneous mass. Drawing on oral data, archival research, and published accounts, she charts the rise and fall of a stratum of middle class agricultural producers in southern Mozambique that she deems central to the problem of food production. Like those of the colonial government, Frelimo's anti-peasant policies are rooted in a desire to prevent this middle class from becoming politically and economically independent and thereby acting as a counterweight to state power. To address the agricultural crisis, Bowen calls for a reconsideration of Mozambican and IMF policies to support rather than suppress capital accumulation within this rural middle class. Through its careful consideration of the peasantry and the role of NGOs, The State Against the Peasantry offers a nuanced understanding of the development process that has taken place in Mozambique and other southern African countries since independence.
About the Author
Merle L. Bowen is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
The State against the Peasantry: Rural Struggles in Colonial and Postcolonial Mozambique SYNOPSIS
Unlike analysts who blame the state, the elite, or the peasantry itself, Bowen (political science, U. of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign) traces the African country's decline in production to policies established during the Portuguese colonial period and continued by the one-party government after liberation in 1975. He calls on Mozambique and the International Monetary Fund to establish policies to support rather than suppress capital accumulation among the rural middle class peasantry. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
FROM THE CRITICS
Landeg White - Times Literary Supplement
...the sheer heroism of Bowen's research in rural Mozambique deserves emphasis. Bowen worked on a state farm and narrowly excaped an ambush in which over eighty people died.