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Hunger and food shortages have been endemic in rural Ethiopia for
countless generations; nevertheless, it was not until the
mid-1970s, following the fall of the imperial regime and its
replacement by the military government, the Derg, that food
security became a concern in public policy discourse, and a variety
of program initiatives were put in place to tackle the problem.
Since then there has been increased awareness of the complex causes
of food shortages and a growing determination on the part of
decision-makers to bring to an end the blight of hunger and
malnutrition that has been so much a part of the daily lives of
millions of poor and vulnerable people in the country. This book
stems from the LEAFS (Linking Emergency Assistance with Food
Security) project initiated in 2007 as a collaborative project
between Wageningen University Disaster Studies Department and Bahir
Dar University Department of Disaster Risk Management and
Sustainable Development. The project sought to understand linkages
between the global and local levels in food security policy and
practice, and included local level research by PhD students in two
weredas of Amhara Region. This resultant volume this brings
together a wide diversity of research works, many of which were
specifically commissioned, looking at the effects of food security
interventions broadly, and the PSNP in particular, on individuals
households, communities, regions and the country as a whole,
providing a springboard for wider public debate and reflection.
Under its program of land investments, the Ethiopian government has
leased out huge tracts of land to domestic and foreign investors on
terms that are highly favorable to both but particularly to foreign
ones. Critical reports on the bonanza reaped by foreign capital
have appeared in the world media and the websites of international
activist organizations, and while some of these are based on
questionable evidence, the global attention they have drawn may
well be deserved given the image of the country as a land of
poverty and hunger. This study, which is based on information
gathered from field interviews as well as other sources, looks at
the subject from a land rights perspective, with emphasis on the
relations of power between small land-users and their communities
on the one hand and the state on the other. At bottom what is at
stake is the land and the resources on it, and what is being
grabbed are rights that in most cases belong to peasant farmers,
pastoralists and their communities. In the long run, the shift of
agrarian system from small-scale to large-scale, foreign dominated
production -which is what the investment program is now doing- will
marginalize small producers, and cause immense damage to local
ecosystems, wildlife habitats and biodiversity.
This volume brings together a number of studies on rural Ethiopia
written by the author in recent years and offered as a contribution
to the emerging debate on agrarian change in the country. The broad
time frame for the work is the last half-century of modern
Ethiopia, from the 1950s to the beginning of the 2000s, a period
which coincides politically with the country's three regimes,
namely the imperial regime of Haile Sellassie, which was replaced
by a military-Stalinist junta known as the Derg, and the present
regime which came to power after overthrowing the latter. Over this
half century much has changed in the country but much also remains
the same. Similarly, while the three political regimes differ
radically in a number of significant respects, they also have many
things in common, particularly in their relations to the peasantry,
their quest for a strong presence in the countryside, and, in some
respects, in their approach to development management.
Action for Development, Christian Aid, and Inter-Church
Organization for Development Cooperation commissioned this study.
They are all active in Wollaita, one of the most densely populated
areas of Ethiopia. It examines the development interventions of the
last four and a half decades from the point of view of three key
determinants of poverty and destitution: population dynamics and
land shortage, urbanisation and commercialisation, and livelihood
diversification. The interventions are found to have largely failed
to address these key determinants; and the study suggests that a
considerable change of policy is needed to put these determinants
at centre stage and to accelerate the pace of development.
Dessalegn Rahmato won the 1999 Prince Claus Award in recognition of
significant achievements in the field of research and development.
He is a Senior Research Fellow at the Forum for Social Studies, and
was formerly its Executive Director. He has published on land and
agrarian issues, food security, environmental policy, and poverty
in Wollaita. His current research is on civil society and
democratisation.
This study illustrates that assistance to human rights has been
instrumental in the emergence of a voluntary sector in Ethiopia.
Humanitarian assistance and socio-economic development have been
notable too; however assistance to democratisation has been
limited, in part due to the failure of political parties to broaden
their power base. In contrast, there have been some notable local
achievements in areas such as elections and press freedom.
The three papers published in this volume were originally presented
at the First International Conference on the Ethiopian Economy,
convened by the Ethiopian Economic Association in Addis Ababa in
2003. From historical perspectives, the papers consider: poverty
and agricultural involution; poverty and urban governance
institutions; and HIV/AIDS and poverty.
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