Trampled no more : voices from Bulawayo's townships about families, life, survival, and social change in Zimbabwe

Author(s)

    • Moyo, Otrude Nontobeko

Bibliographic Information

Trampled no more : voices from Bulawayo's townships about families, life, survival, and social change in Zimbabwe

Otrude Nontobeko Moyo

University Press of America, c2007

  • : pbk.

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 291-300

Includes indes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The stories of the Zimbabwean situation, particularly those of the urban townships of Bulawayo, are poignantly narrated through the voices of family members recounting their personal circumstances and what they perceive as the primary factors contributing to their repressed positions in the socio-economical hierarchy. Using an insider's perspective, Professor Moyo goes behind the scenes in order to dismantle the simplistic "blame game" which asserts that the deterioration of Zimbabwe was caused solely by the current ZANU-PF lead government. The study details the historical context and interpretations of history, which led to the much-discussed Zimbabwean political and economic crisis. Socio-economic policies that shape, and continue to shape, the complex livelihoods of the Zimbabwean people are also attributed to current and future conditions. The author argues that within the Zimbabwean situation these contributors and their counters have not encouraged the prioritization of the needs of the most vulnerable population groups, but rather, that they have a tendency to hinder their general well being by limiting fundamental resources such as access to basic necessities, freedoms, affirmation of communality and individuality. Through the narratives of the Zimbabwean people, Professor Moyo highlights some of the acute strategies they and their families have used to survive as a way to explore future policy avenues that take into account people's "agentiveness" (the capacity to overcome unfavorable conditions by utilizing what little resources are available), Zimbabwe's greatest asset.

Table of Contents

Part 1 Acknowledgements Chapter 2 Introduction Chapter 3 Ancestors: We, Too, Are People! Chapter 4 Soldiering on: Rambayi Makashinga! Chapter 5 The Born Frees: Families and Livlihoods Reconstituted by Transnational Migration Chapter 6 Conclusion Part 7 Appendixes Part 8 Glossary of Foreign Terms Part 9 Bibliography Part 10 Index

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