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The impact of industrial agrarian policies on soils: experiences of small-scale farmers in the rural Eastern Cape

After the end of legislated apartheid, the South African government changed old policies that had been driven by segregation against the black majority. Black small-scale farmers in rural areas were encouraged to join commercial agriculture to capitalise on state subsidies and support. Municipalitie...

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Main Author: Phakisi, Nteboheng Portas
Other Authors: Green, Lesley
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Social Anthropology 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Phakisi, Nteboheng Portas
author2 Green, Lesley
author_browse Green, Lesley
Phakisi, Nteboheng Portas
author_facet Green, Lesley
Phakisi, Nteboheng Portas
author_sort Phakisi, Nteboheng Portas
collection Thesis
description After the end of legislated apartheid, the South African government changed old policies that had been driven by segregation against the black majority. Black small-scale farmers in rural areas were encouraged to join commercial agriculture to capitalise on state subsidies and support. Municipalities including Buffalo City Metropolitan, Great Kei, Amathole and others in the Eastern Cape, in collaboration with the Eastern Cape Department of Agriculture and agro industry, introduced programmes such as the Massive Food Production Programme and the current Cropping Project to support rural farmers and to reduce poverty in the province. The initiatives included the introduction of genetically modified maize seeds, chemical fertilisers, chemical herbicides, and pesticides, as well as herbicide-resistant and pest-resistant crops. However, joining state-funded initiatives meant farmers had to give up the farming practices and knowledge systems that had sustained them for years, and they lost the kinship they had built with the local soil and its organisms. By kinship I am referring to a symbiotic relationship that does not separate nature from society, a relationship that is mutualistic and in which there is no mastery of one party over the other. Working with rural Eastern Cape small-scale farmers who participated in these programmes, this study employs a multidisciplinary approach to understand the changing agricultural landscape in rural South Africa, focusing on the consequences of state-funded programmes on local soil knowledge in the context of current Eastern Cape industrial agrarian policies. Navigating from small-scale farmers' voices, remote sensing technology, history, African environmentalism, soil science and the human psyche, the study examines what happens when corporations and the government encroach on traditional and small-scale agriculture. This integrative research methodology of the Environmental Humanities, framed from the Global South, compels us to reconceptualise our relationship with nature. The study argues that while agro-industrial technologies can be used with existing local practices to assist farmers, they should never be introduced as a replacement for existing local knowledge of soil fertility. Moreover, where policies focus on the financialisation of the agrarian economy, such policies risk benefitting agrobusinesses instead of poor, small-scale farmers. If policies intended to stimulate rural development are to be effective, the needs of rural small-scale farmers must be taken into consideration when such policies are initiated.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:47.142Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
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publisher Social Anthropology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38535 The impact of industrial agrarian policies on soils: experiences of small-scale farmers in the rural Eastern Cape Phakisi, Nteboheng Portas Green, Lesley Eastern Cape industrial agrarian policies After the end of legislated apartheid, the South African government changed old policies that had been driven by segregation against the black majority. Black small-scale farmers in rural areas were encouraged to join commercial agriculture to capitalise on state subsidies and support. Municipalities including Buffalo City Metropolitan, Great Kei, Amathole and others in the Eastern Cape, in collaboration with the Eastern Cape Department of Agriculture and agro industry, introduced programmes such as the Massive Food Production Programme and the current Cropping Project to support rural farmers and to reduce poverty in the province. The initiatives included the introduction of genetically modified maize seeds, chemical fertilisers, chemical herbicides, and pesticides, as well as herbicide-resistant and pest-resistant crops. However, joining state-funded initiatives meant farmers had to give up the farming practices and knowledge systems that had sustained them for years, and they lost the kinship they had built with the local soil and its organisms. By kinship I am referring to a symbiotic relationship that does not separate nature from society, a relationship that is mutualistic and in which there is no mastery of one party over the other. Working with rural Eastern Cape small-scale farmers who participated in these programmes, this study employs a multidisciplinary approach to understand the changing agricultural landscape in rural South Africa, focusing on the consequences of state-funded programmes on local soil knowledge in the context of current Eastern Cape industrial agrarian policies. Navigating from small-scale farmers' voices, remote sensing technology, history, African environmentalism, soil science and the human psyche, the study examines what happens when corporations and the government encroach on traditional and small-scale agriculture. This integrative research methodology of the Environmental Humanities, framed from the Global South, compels us to reconceptualise our relationship with nature. The study argues that while agro-industrial technologies can be used with existing local practices to assist farmers, they should never be introduced as a replacement for existing local knowledge of soil fertility. Moreover, where policies focus on the financialisation of the agrarian economy, such policies risk benefitting agrobusinesses instead of poor, small-scale farmers. If policies intended to stimulate rural development are to be effective, the needs of rural small-scale farmers must be taken into consideration when such policies are initiated. 2023-09-12T07:57:05Z 2023-09-12T07:57:05Z 2023 2023-09-12T07:36:02Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38535 eng application/pdf Social Anthropology Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Eastern Cape
industrial agrarian policies
Phakisi, Nteboheng Portas
The impact of industrial agrarian policies on soils: experiences of small-scale farmers in the rural Eastern Cape
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The impact of industrial agrarian policies on soils: experiences of small-scale farmers in the rural Eastern Cape
title_full The impact of industrial agrarian policies on soils: experiences of small-scale farmers in the rural Eastern Cape
title_fullStr The impact of industrial agrarian policies on soils: experiences of small-scale farmers in the rural Eastern Cape
title_full_unstemmed The impact of industrial agrarian policies on soils: experiences of small-scale farmers in the rural Eastern Cape
title_short The impact of industrial agrarian policies on soils: experiences of small-scale farmers in the rural Eastern Cape
title_sort impact of industrial agrarian policies on soils experiences of small scale farmers in the rural eastern cape
topic Eastern Cape
industrial agrarian policies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38535
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