Progress, power, and violent accumulation in Zimbabwe

Progress, power, and violent accumulation in Zimbabwe

Author: 
Moore, David
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis Group
Date published: 
2012
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
Journal of Contemporary African Studies
Source: 
Journal of Contemporary African Studies, Vol. 30, Issue 1, 2012, PP.1-9
ISSN: 
0258-9001
Abstract: 

Zimbabwe's recent travails have challenged the concept of progress as it is popularly conceived, as they have forced social scientists to revisit many of the verities of nationalist history and the initial euphoria of Zimbabwean ‘liberation’. Critics of ‘fast-track’ land reform and patriotism, however, have been as simplistic as the regime's academic praise singers, and often simply turn celebratory scholarship upside down. Historically rooted and specifically applied concepts of primitive accumulation can assist the understanding of the development of Zimbabwe's coercive networks of accumulation and their more recent manifestations, but they do not solve the problems of how to lessen violence and deepen democracy in the short term.

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CITATION: Moore, David. Progress, power, and violent accumulation in Zimbabwe . : Taylor & Francis Group , 2012. Journal of Contemporary African Studies, Vol. 30, Issue 1, 2012, PP.1-9 - Available at: https://library.au.int/progress-power-and-violent-accumulation-zimbabwe-3