1st Edition

Studies in the Economic History of Southern Africa Volume 1: The Front Line states

    First Published in 1990. Both the history and the historiography of Southern Africa are in flux as the 1990s open. This collection of original studies by a new generation of Southern African scholars seeks to go beyond established analyses and debates. The current watershed challenges old and new orthodoxies alike. This collection treats the economic history of six states-Angola, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe - and several sectors in the prevailing state capitalist political economies - agriculture and industry, land and labour. Whilst the book opens with a chapter on the regional iron age, its focus is mainly contemporary, yet recognising the continuing impacts of regional and global history. The authors adopt a variety of perspectives, reflective of their cases and contents, but the balance is towards critical and radical scholarship, reflecting Southern African realities as well as the contributors' generation. Common to the economic historians who have contributed to this volume is a realisation of the fading boundary between social and cultural history and their own disciplines. Increasingly perceptible also is the influence of political forces on the economic life of the region, whether it is the dependence of the Southern African 'periphery' on the yet more industrialised Western 'centre', or the relationship between the narrower 'periphery' of the Front-Line States vis-a-vis the 'centre' as represented by the power of South Africa. This theme of politics having its roots deeply embedded in the rich soil of the controversial socio-economic issues appears in a widened perspective in the companion collection of studies on the remaining countries of the region: South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland.

    Editors’ Introduction, Notes on contributors and editors, 1. Socio-Economic Formations of the Southern African Iron Age: An Overview, 2. The Development of Dependent Capitalism in Portuguese Africa, 3. Industrial Development in Zambia, Zimbabwe and Malawi: The Primacy of Politics, 4. The Direction of Agricultural Development in Zambia, Zimbabwe and Malawi, 5. The Modem Economic History of Botswana, 6. Land and Labour in the Namibian Economy, Index

    Biography

    Zbignlew A. Konczackl is Professor Emeritus, Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia, and his books include Public Finance and Economic Development of Natal 1893-1910 (Duke University Press, 1967), and The Economics of Pastoralism: A Case Study of Sub-Saharan Africa (Cass, 1978). Jane L. Parpart, Associate Professor of History, Dalhousie University, has written Labour and Capital on the African Copperbelt and co-edited, with Sharon Stichter, Patriarchy and Class: African Women in the Home and the Workplace. Timothy M. Shaw is Professor of Political Science and Director of International Development Studies at Dalhousie University, where he has also served as Director of the Centre for African Studies. His publications include Economic Crisis in Africa, Towards a Political Economy for Africa, Coping with Africa's Food Crisis, and Corporatism in Africa.