which was held on rangeland policy held under the auspices of the Commonwealth
Secretariat at Matopos, Zimbabwe, in January 1992. It was organised around
commissioned case studies (on Botswana, Zimbabwe, Kenya, and Nigeria) prepared
by scientists from each of these commonwealth countries. In contrast to an
earlier technical meeting, the Matopos workshop concentrated on the legal,
social and institutional aspects of communal rangeland management, and was aimed
primarily at field personnel, administrators, and policy makers in national
ministries or departments active in range management in African Commonwealth
countries. The workshop was designed to acquaint government officers with
recent theoretical developments in range ecology, and to discuss the
implications of these developments for rangeland policy in their countries.
Conversely, the response of the workshop participants to the new ecological
concepts provided an initial test of the acceptability of these ideas by those
who would ultimately be responsible for their implementation. Some highlights
of this workshop are summarised in this paper.
Ref ID : 2280
413. Behnke, R.H.J. Measuring the benefits of subsistence versus commercial
livestock production in Africa. Agricultural Systems 16:109-135, 1985.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : BOTSWANA; POPULATION
Notes : Three methods for measuring the benefits of commercial and subsistence
livestock production in Africa are discussed: firstly, biological measures of
herd performance are illustrated with material from Botswana; secondly, the
profitability of the herding operation can be measured economically, a technique
which requires the ascription of cash values to in-kind produce. An improved
method for imputing these values is presented; and finally, one can compare the
nutritional status of human populations engaged in commercial and non-commercial
lievestock production. Each of these three techniques provides a limited
description of the total environment which conditions farmer decision-making.
As a general rule, therefore, we should favour a combination of techniques and
exercise considerable skepticism in evaluating the results of any unidimensional
comparison.
Ref ID : 1642
414. Behnke, R.H.J. Open-range management and property rights in pastoral
Africa: a case of spontaneous range enclosure in south Darfur, Sudan. Pastoral
Development Network.Anonymous London:Overseas Development Institute. :1-29,
1985.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : MODELS; POLICY; GRAZING EFFECTS; COMMUNAL AREA; VELD MANAGEMENT; LAND
TENURE
Notes : This paper was originally commissioned by the Overseas Development
Institute. Field work in the Sudan was carried out in association with Mokoro
Ltd. and Hunting Technical Services. It was suggested that the author focus on
the overgrazing problem in light of economic literature on externalities. The
following issues are discussed: the conventional model of communal rangeland
mismanagement; a property rights analysis; a range enclosure movement: the case
of south Darfur, Sudan; and conclusions and policy implications.
Ref ID : 1202
415. Behrmann, H.I. Technique and tenure in South African agriculture.Anonymous
Anonymous Pietermaritzburg:University of Natal Press. Inaugural Lecture , 1965.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : LAND TENURE; LAND USE; AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION; COMMUNAL AREA;
POPULATION; SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE
Notes 1 : The history of agriculture may be written in two ways: firstly, as a
record of the practices or techniques of agriculture, the methods of production
that have been adopted through the ages; secondly, in terms of the rights or
title to occupy land - hence the title of the inaugral lecture "Technique and
Tenure in Agriculture".
Ref ID : 647
416. Beinart, W. Soil erosion, conservationism and ideas about development: a
southern African exploration, 1900-1960. Journal of Southern African Studies
11(1):52-83, 1984.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : SOIL EROSION; CONSERVATION; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; ENVIRONMENTAL
HISTORY; SOUTHERN AFRICA
Notes : The central issue raised in this paper is the nature and content of
colonial conservationism, and the manner in which it was applied.
Conservationist ideas, it is suggested were generated out of perceived threats
to the future of agrarian production, rather than aesthetic conerns (although
the latter may have influenced their content). As ideas associated with
progressive agrarian capital, and the technical departments of colonial states,
they differed significantly, though by no means completely from those of more
radical conservationists today.
Ref ID : 2428
417. Beinart, W. Transkei small holders and agrarian reform. Journal of
Contemporary African Studies , 1992.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : TRANSKEI; POVERTY; POLICY; POPULATION; LAND REFORM; RURAL
DEVELOPMENT; BETTERMENT PLANNING; RESTORATION; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; ECONOMIC
ASPECTS
Notes : The purpose is to investigate and address some issues in the debate on
agrarian reform. The study used some of the detailed material production in
research on Transkei particularly on problems of peasant or small holder
agriculture, rural poverty, aspects of state policy such as rehabilitation and
betterment. Almost all researchers conducted generally indicated that there is
extensive and deep poverty in Transkei and the great majority of people do not
produce anything to make them sufficient for subsistence. A very large
proportion of food requirements - 70% is imported. There is heavy dependence on
migrant workers earnings and this places many people in Transkei in displaced
proletarians. The author feels that movement by small holders onto farms
presently owned by whites is unlikely to make a major difference to the overall
population of Transkei. Food supply, efficiencies and ecological safety need to
be prioritised rather than population of movements. The author suggested that
planners and policy-makers start with the people they are planning for and look
carefully at how they use their land and incomes and how and why they move.
This article can be found in the main library at University of Fort Hare. See
also ref. I.D. no 2339.
Ref ID : 1026
418. Beinart, W. The night of the jackal: sheep, pastures and predators in South
Africa 1900-1930. Paper presented at the Africa Seminar, Centre for African
Studies, University of Cape Town, 18 May 1993. 1993.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY; LEGISLATION; POLICY
Notes : This paper is a preliminary exercise in assessing the implications of
state regulation of stock-farming, grazing and predators in SA. The
significance of such control in shaping 'nature', government bureaucracies and
the relationship between state and its subjects, both white and black, has
probably been underestimated. These issues also became central to the
development of conservationist ideas and policies.
Ref ID : 188
419. Beinart, W. Environmental destruction in sheep farming areas of South
Africa: soil erosion, animals and pastures over the longer term.Anonymous
Bristol:Department of Historical Studies, University of Bristol. :1-25, 1994.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : LAND DEGRADATION; ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY; VELD MANAGEMENT; LIVESTOCK
PRODUCTION; SOIL EROSION; EROSION; RAINFALL
Notes : A great deal of the literature written on SA, which explicitly addresses
environmental issues, paints a picture of decay and destruction over the long
term. One of the most persistent patterns, and an important focus for
commentators, has been soil erosion. In a country where stock is important both
for white and black farmers, overstocking and overgrazing have frequently been
cited as a major cause of denudation, desiccation and erosion. The state of the
settler stock farms and semi-arid areas more generally have been the trigger for
broader debates and discourse about ecological decay in the region. This paper
examines ideas about degradation on white-owned stock farms in the lower
rainfall grazing regions of SA - more than half the area of the country - in the
light of some fascinating recent research in botanical history.
Ref ID : 646
420. Beinart, W. Environmental destruction in southern Africa: Soil erosion,
animals, and pastures over the longer term. In: Time-scales and environmental
change, edited by Driver, T.S. and Chapman, G.P.London and New York:Routledge,
1996,p. 149-167.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : SOIL EROSION; LAND DEGRADATION; GRAZING EFFECTS; VELD CONDITION;
ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY
Notes : The author is concerned, not with climatic change per se, nor with a
global perspective. He uses a case study to show how, during this century
different actors -government officials, scientists, white farmers, black
herders, apartheid politicians, and post-apartheid politicians - have
interpreted environmental change in the rangelands of the Karoo of SA. This is
the human lifetime scale according to which some people believe they can detect
environmental degradation, and seek to find the causes. But as the author
points out, the evidence is very contradictory, and there are unspoken
assumptions about what is right or good in the first place - mostly that,
despite the use of the rangelands for stocking, somehow they should remain the
same, in some undefined equilibrium, and further that white settlement meant
progress, even if it had a few managerial hiccoughs along the way. The Karoo
also happens to be the kind of area of low latitudes where there could be great
swings in precipitation and where landscapes might be far from any biological
and geomorphological equilibrium. The author's view is that we should be
concerned with change and the management of change.
Ref ID : 2308
421. Beinart, W. African history, environmental history and race relations.
Oxford staff & students. 1999.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY
Notes : This is an inaugural lecture, which concludes with a fable about a
jackal and hyena. The author states that he finds this fable instructive and,
like history, it can be read in a number of ways. It is an accurate observation
of the susceptibility of hyenas to traps; for this reason they were wiped out as
predators in the 19th century while jackals survived. He would like to think
that it is an instruction manual for stock theft, that age-old barometer of race
relations in South Africa. It is probably a story about greed; and one of the
many in which the jackal outsmarts the hyena. And it is also a story
illustrating the interaction of different traditions and experiences. Once of
the most fertile and inspiring areas of research for the author lies in
examining the innovation and renewal which comes from such hybrid sources. The
motor for his academic writing has certainly been a faltering attempt to
traverse and translate between a range of cultures. Moreover, he likes the way
that jackals in fable and fact help us to think about approaches to
environmental history. For that reason, we should welcome them into the fold.
He suggests that we also emulate their adaptibility, and cautions that it is
unwise to go on for too long.
Ref ID : 1168
422. Beinart, W. and Coates, P. Environment and history: the taming of nature in
the USA and South Africa, London:Routledge, 1995.pp. 1-120.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY
Ref ID : 1143
423. Bekker, J.C. The changing face of South African land tenure. SAIPA
26(1):15-34, 1991.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : LAND TENURE; LAND REFORM; POLICY; TRANSKEI; BOPHUTHATSWANA; VENDA;
CISKEI
Notes : This article is a summary of the different land tenure systems prevalent
in SA, and it is a discussion of such systems with relevance to the Government's
White Paper regarding land reform. The emphasis will fall on laws which
intended to facilitate area discrimination. The government is presently
considering rescinding such laws. The detail of the laws are therefore not
dealt with. This article is merely intended to place the debate concerning land
rights in some perspective. Other aspects regarding land issues to be dealt
with include: communal land; rights to partitioning; and perspectives put
forward by the ANC, the governments of Transkei, Bophuthatswana, Venda and
Ciskei. The clauses which follow from recommendations provided in the White
Paper are dealt with briefly, but not in any detail.
Ref ID : 2556
424. Belete, A., Igodan, C., M'marete, C.K., and Van Averbeke, W. Analysis of
rural household consumption expenditure in South Africa: the case of food plot
holder in Tyefu Irrigation Scheme in the Eastern Cape province. Agrekon , 1999.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : IRRIGATION; EASTERN CAPE; MODELS; CISKEI; RURAL DEVELOPMENT;
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; ECONOMIC ASPECTS
Notes : The purpose of the study was to investigate and analyse food plot
holders' expenditure behaviour and patterns at the Tyefu Irrigation Scheme.
Secondary data was used. Access to the field data collected by the irrigation
research group at the Faculty of Agriculture and ARDRI (1998) of Fort Hare for a
study entitled: "An investigation into food plot production on irrigation
schemes in the central region of the Eastern Cape Province" permitted an anlysis
of individual food plot holder expenditure records. Data was extracted from the
questionnaire of 156 sampled respondents. It was analysed using rural and
household consumption expediture models. The study revealed that the sampled
food plot holders have a marginal propensity to consume of 0.349, as well as an
average propensity to consume 0.652. Family characteristics such as age
distribution and family size vary in their ability to explain expenditure
patterns depending upon types of commodity. The relatively high inelasticity of
food, clothing, health and education with respect to the 2 family
characteristics (age and family size) is very strange and contrary to
expectation. Poor farm households like the ones at Tyefu would be expected to
spend the greater portion of their income on basics such as food, clothing,
health and education. It was suggested that future areas of research should
include farm asset effects on household expenditure behaviour and the impact of
inflation on rural household consumption behaviour. This article is available
at the main library in the University of Fort Hare. See also ID ref. no. 2339.
Ref ID : 2555
425. Belete, A., Kadzere, C.T., and Nyamapfene, K. The potential for commercial
milk goat production in the arid Eastern Cape regions: economic analysis of the
performance indicators. Agrekon , 1999.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : EASTERN CAPE; ECONOMIC ASPECTS
Notes : The purpose of the study was to consider the financial and economic
viability and technical feasibility of commercial production of dairy goats, and
of the establishment of a milk processing plant in the Eastern Cape. Towards
the end of 1995 and the beginning of 1996 an exploratory survey was conducted in
the semi-arid part of the Eastern Cape province. Data from this exploratory
survey was used for the analysis. Three types of analytical techniques, i.e. net
present worth (NPW), internal rate of return (IRR) and benefit cost (B/c) ratio,
were used to analyse the data. The study found that commercial production of
dairy goats together with a milk processing plant in the said region are
profitable from both a private and social point of view. With a discount rate
of 15%, the NPW, B/c ratio and IRR respectively were found to be R4.3 million,
1.44 and 54%. Sensitivity analyses to changes in the benefits and costs of
inputs were conducted. The project was found to be viable when benefits were
reduced by 25%. The project is still viable when the cost of inputs is inflated
by 25%. In both cases, the B/c ratio is greater than one and IRR is greater
than the market rate of interest. However, the combined effect, i.e. reducing
benefit by 25% and inflating costs by 25%, would result in negative NPW. This
article is available at the University of Fort Hare main library. See also ID
ref. no. 2339.
Ref ID : 1164
426. Bembridge, T.J. A systems approach study of agricultural development
problems in Transkei (Bibliography). 198.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : TRANSKEI; EASTERN CAPE; COMMUNAL AREA; AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT;
FARMING SYSTEMS; AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION; BIBLIOGRAPHY
Notes : In addition to an extensive bibliography the following appendices are
included: a questionnaire to heads of rural households; questionnaire to
farmers' wives; letter to extension staff re: survey; postal questionnaire to
extention workers; interview questionnaire to extension workers; questionnaire
to headmen and tribal authorities; questionnaire to members of co-operative
committees, farmers' associations, Zenzele, church organisations etc.;
questionnaire to traders and businessmen; and questionnaire to school
principals.
Ref ID : 128
427. Bembridge, T.J. Conclusions from a systems approach study of agricultural
development in Transkei.Anonymous Ciskei:University of Fort Hare. :i-52, 1982.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : TRANSKEI; EASTERN CAPE; COMMUNAL AREA; AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT;
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION; MODELS; POPULATION; CULTIVATION; BETTERMENT PLANNING;
LIVESTOCK PRODUCTION; IRRIGATION; FARMING SYSTEMS; POLICY; RURAL DEVELOPMENT
Notes : The use of a systems approach as a means of describing, quantifying and
evaluating the physical resources and environment, agricultural production, the
human potential and the institutional framework of the agricultural economy of
Transkei, has been shown in this study to be a useful model for a holistic
approach. The problems investigated in this study are essentially the various
factors in the agricultural development system which affect low levels of
agricultural production and development of rural communities. The study
objectives were to investigate the various groups of factors which determine and
influence the functioning of the agricultural production system, in order to
diagnose constraints, and to give broad guidelines and recommendations to
increase output and efficiency in agricultural production. The study included
three areas considered to be representative of semi-intensive and semi-extensive
farming in Transkei. Sample surveys of farmers (N = 578), farmers' wives (N =
279), tribal and other local leaders, were supplemented by an analysis of
records, by field observations and from other information sources. The entire
extension service population (N = 269), was included in the postal questionnaire
to extension workers. The sample for the interview questionnaire to extension
workers was stratified on a random sample basis according to grade. Analysis of
the data was by means of computer, using correlation and step-wise regression
techniques. Relative to other parts of Africa, Transkei has a good potential
for intensive and semi-intensive agriculture. Present production levels of
crops and livestock per unit of land is declining and provide for only about one
third of the food requirements of the de facto population. Through continuous
cultivation and depletion of soil fertility, cropping potential has declined,
and most of the grazing areas are in varying stages of degradation. As a result
of betterment planning, infrastructural development, although inadequate is not
unreasonably poor, compared to other National States. The study highlights the
need for further infrastructural development based on rural service centres.
Evidence from the study clearly shows that the human factors which affect
agricultural development are a muti-variant cause effect phenomenon. Most of
the socio-economic and socio-psychological factors discussed in the study are
amenable to change and can be influenced by appropriate rural development
programmes. The role of women as contributors to the rural economy has
generally been underestimated. Findings on various characteristics of
progressive and 'best farmers' indicate they are an important factor in
explaining and understanding variations in farming output. Both the use and
provision of farming information is completely inadequate and a constraint to
improving agricultural production. A general lack of draught power, suitable
implements and farming tools is a major constraint to improved crop production
by farmers. An obvious conclusion was that the number of farmers who have
adopted basic crop and livestock production practices is low, despite the fact
that they have been recommended for many years. This is a major cause of
inordinately low crop yields and efficiency of livestock production. Major
shortcomings in the Qamata irrigation scheme are due to uncontrolled and
inefficient irrigation. Traditionally owned cattle, sheep and goats are one of
the largest resources in the rural areas, but make a relatively small
contribution to the rural economy. Suggestions are put forward to integrate
cattle into the farming system. Crop and livestock owners in Transkei are more
in the nature of consumers of agricultural products rather than producers.
Although there appears to have been a favourable attitudinal impact to
betterment planning and a good deal of infrastructural development has taken
place, there has been little, if any, significant, improvement in agricultural
production in the last 27 years. An operational policy and strategy for the
development of agriculture and rural areas has by and large still to be
formulated. Evidence showed an almost complete lack of institutional supporting
services in terms of credit, marketing, research, and agrarian reform. An in-
depth study of extension services revealed many shortcomings resulting in low
effectiveness and efficiency. Thje study concludes by suggesting a
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