Ethiopia: Failure of Land Reform and Agricultural Crisis
By (Author) Kidane Mengisteab
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
21st August 1990
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
338.10963
Hardback
240
This book attempts to explain the failure of Ethiopia's land reform and the problem of transformation of the peasantry through a holistic approach, by pulling together numerous factors and themes. The book first defines a comprehensive land reform as a process that influences the deprived peasant masses economically and politically. It then attempts to establish the relevance of such a process to the transformation of the peasant mode of production to a surplus producing exchange economy and consequently, to socioeconomic development of less developed countries. Ethiopia: Failure of Land Reform and Agricultural Crisis also attempts to identify specific attributes of successful democratization processes (comprehensive land reforms) on the basis of which it evaluates and explains the failure of the Ethiopian land reform. Suitable for research, this book should appeal to scholars and students of development in general and African political economy and African revolutions in particular.
From a research, technical, and organizational standpoint, Mengisteab has put together an extremely professional study, providing the reader with a fresh look at the pitfalls of land reform in Ethiopia....scholars, policymakers, and, most importantly, students of development will find it extremely useful and even enjoyable to read.-Studies in Comparative International Development
"From a research, technical, and organizational standpoint, Mengisteab has put together an extremely professional study, providing the reader with a fresh look at the pitfalls of land reform in Ethiopia....scholars, policymakers, and, most importantly, students of development will find it extremely useful and even enjoyable to read."-Studies in Comparative International Development
KIDANE MENGISTEAB is an Assistant Professor at Old Dominion University. He is the author of several articles on agricultural development in Africa and on Africa's food crisis.