Agricultural change - prospects for the future: a case study from the Southern Highlands of Tanzania

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Standard

Agricultural change - prospects for the future : a case study from the Southern Highlands of Tanzania. / Birch-Thomsen, T.

I: Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture, Bind 29, Nr. 2, 01.01.1990, s. 146-160.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Birch-Thomsen, T 1990, 'Agricultural change - prospects for the future: a case study from the Southern Highlands of Tanzania', Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture, bind 29, nr. 2, s. 146-160.

APA

Birch-Thomsen, T. (1990). Agricultural change - prospects for the future: a case study from the Southern Highlands of Tanzania. Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture, 29(2), 146-160.

Vancouver

Birch-Thomsen T. Agricultural change - prospects for the future: a case study from the Southern Highlands of Tanzania. Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture. 1990 jan. 1;29(2):146-160.

Author

Birch-Thomsen, T. / Agricultural change - prospects for the future : a case study from the Southern Highlands of Tanzania. I: Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture. 1990 ; Bind 29, Nr. 2. s. 146-160.

Bibtex

@article{c02e2dfad5574f7b8408ef78b741c986,
title = "Agricultural change - prospects for the future: a case study from the Southern Highlands of Tanzania",
abstract = "The transition from traditional fallow systems to more permanent cultivating has occurred in wide areas of the Southern Highlands of Tanzania. This change in agricultural practice is largely due to three factors: the villagization programme; introduction of hybrid maize along with biochemicals; and the development of animal traction. Social differentiation has been reinforced due to an unequal access to the production factors and thereby hindering the upward social mobility of the poor peasantry. The pressure on land has increased as a consequence of the high population growth rate, concentration of the rural population into villages and the increased use of continuous mono-cropping. Furthermore, the introduction of ox-mechanization has caused a change in the labour bottleneck from land preparation to weeding which, in the end, enforces the social differentiation. -from Author",
author = "T. Birch-Thomsen",
year = "1990",
month = jan,
day = "1",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "146--160",
journal = "Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture",
issn = "0049-8599",
publisher = "DLG Verlagsgesellschaft",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Agricultural change - prospects for the future

T2 - a case study from the Southern Highlands of Tanzania

AU - Birch-Thomsen, T.

PY - 1990/1/1

Y1 - 1990/1/1

N2 - The transition from traditional fallow systems to more permanent cultivating has occurred in wide areas of the Southern Highlands of Tanzania. This change in agricultural practice is largely due to three factors: the villagization programme; introduction of hybrid maize along with biochemicals; and the development of animal traction. Social differentiation has been reinforced due to an unequal access to the production factors and thereby hindering the upward social mobility of the poor peasantry. The pressure on land has increased as a consequence of the high population growth rate, concentration of the rural population into villages and the increased use of continuous mono-cropping. Furthermore, the introduction of ox-mechanization has caused a change in the labour bottleneck from land preparation to weeding which, in the end, enforces the social differentiation. -from Author

AB - The transition from traditional fallow systems to more permanent cultivating has occurred in wide areas of the Southern Highlands of Tanzania. This change in agricultural practice is largely due to three factors: the villagization programme; introduction of hybrid maize along with biochemicals; and the development of animal traction. Social differentiation has been reinforced due to an unequal access to the production factors and thereby hindering the upward social mobility of the poor peasantry. The pressure on land has increased as a consequence of the high population growth rate, concentration of the rural population into villages and the increased use of continuous mono-cropping. Furthermore, the introduction of ox-mechanization has caused a change in the labour bottleneck from land preparation to weeding which, in the end, enforces the social differentiation. -from Author

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0025656006&partnerID=8YFLogxK

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:0025656006

VL - 29

SP - 146

EP - 160

JO - Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture

JF - Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture

SN - 0049-8599

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 209292409