全部 标题 作者
关键词 摘要

OALib Journal期刊
ISSN: 2333-9721
费用:99美元

查看量下载量

相关文章

更多...

How Land Use Policies Are Transforming Shifting Cultivation to Short Fallow Systems and Permanent Cultivation of Annual Crops in Tanzania

DOI: 10.4236/ojf.2024.144022, PP. 397-412

Keywords: Land Use Planning, Land Use Change, Short Fallow Systems, Slash-and-Burn

Full-Text   Cite this paper   Add to My Lib

Abstract:

Recent studies show that shifting cultivation in Tanzania has transformed into more intensive farming practices. One of the drivers of this shift is the implementation of policies that favor sedentary farming. However, there is inadequate information on how this transformation operates at the village level. Based on a case study of one village in Central Tanzania, this study demonstrates that the village land use plan is the primary policy tool for the transformation and intensification of shifting cultivation at the village level. Through the land use planning process, land is allocated only for lawful uses such as settlement, permanent cultivation, and the village forest reserve. No land is designated for shifting cultivation. Additionally, the land use plans are accompanied by by-laws that restrict shifting cultivation practices, such as the use of fire during land preparation and leaving the land fallow for more than 3 years. The intensification of shifting cultivation was not associated with an increase in the use of farm inputs such as improved seeds, fertilizer, or irrigation, as is commonly practiced in sustainable intensive agriculture. Instead, it was associated with the adoption of short fallow farming systems and labor-intensive land preparation methods, such as deep plowing to loosen the soil and sub-soiling vegetation.

References

[1]  Birch-Thomsen, T., & Fog, B. (1996). Changes within Small-Scale Agriculture. A Case-Study from the Southwestern Tanzania. Geografisk Tidsskrift-Danish Journal of Geography, 96, 60-69.
https://doi.org/10.1080/00167223.1996.10649377
[2]  Birch-Thomsen, T., Karim-Sesay, J. A., & Croxton, S. (1999). 2. Animal Traction and Market Conditions: A Case Study from South-Western Tanzania and Northern Zambia; Draft Animal Power Potential and Utilisation in the Tonota District of Botswana; Users in Control: Farmer Participation in Technology Research and Development. In P. Starkey, & P. Kaumbutho (Eds.), Meeting the Challenges of Animal Traction (pp. 33-50). Practical Action Publishing.
[3]  Chidumayo, E. N. (1987). A Shifting Cultivation Land Use System under Population Pressure in Zambia. Agroforestry Systems, 5, 15-25.
https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00046411
[4]  Daley, E. (2005). Land and Social Change in a Tanzanian Village 1: Kinyanambo, 1920s-1990. Journal of Agrarian Change, 5, 363-404.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-0366.2005.00105.x
[5]  Grogan, K., Birch-Thomsen, T., & Lyimo, J. (2013). Transition of Shifting Cultivation and Its Impact on People’s Livelihoods in the Miombo Woodlands of Northern Zambia and South-Western Tanzania. Human Ecology, 41, 77-92.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10745-012-9537-9
[6]  Hamilton, A. C., & Mwasha, I. V. (1989). History of Resource Utilization and Management. In A. C. Hamilton, & R. Bensted-Smith (Eds.), Forest Conservation in the East Usambara Mountains Tanzania (pp. 45-56). IUCN.
[7]  Iliffe, J. (1969). Tanganyika under German Rule 1905-1912. Cambridge University Press.
https://doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511759635
[8]  Itani, J. (2007). Effects of Socio-Economic Changes on Cultivation Systems under Customary Land Tenure in MBozi District, Southerzania. African Study Monographs, No. 34, 57-74.
[9]  KDC (2012a). Kilosa District Socio-Economic Profile. Kilosa District Council.
[10]  KDC (2012b). Mpango wa Matumizi Bora ya Ardhi ya Kijiji cha Ulaya Mbuyuni. Kilosa District Council.
[11]  Kikula, I. S. (1997). Policy Implications on Environment: The Case of Villagisation in Tanzania. Nordic Africa Institute.
[12]  Kilawe, C. J., Maliondo, S. M., Bruun, T. B., Birch-Thomsen, T., Silayo, D. S. A., & Mertz, O. (2022). The Intensification of Shifting Cultivation in Tanzania: Effects on Soil and Vegetation. In A. A. Rukhsana (Ed.), Agriculture, Environment and Sustainable Development: Experiences and Case Studies (pp. 21-42). Springer International Publishing.
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-10406-0_3
[13]  Kilawe, C. J., Mertz, O., Silayo, D. S. A., Birch-Thomsen, T., & Maliondo, S. M. (2018). Transformation of Shifting Cultivation: Extent, Driving Forces and Impacts on Livelihoods in Tanzania. Applied Geography, 94, 84-94.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeog.2018.03.002
[14]  Kimaro, D. N., Msanya, B. M., Ashimogo, G., Mbilinyi, B. P., & Kadigi, R. (2008). Development of Land Suitability Maps with Environmental Overlays for Kilosa District, Tanzania. United Republic of Tanzania.
[15]  Kjekshus, H. (2022). Ecology Control and Economic Development in East African History: The Case of Tanganyika 1850-1950. Ohio U Press.
[16]  Limbu, F. (1995). Agriculture and Rural Development in Tanzania: A Survey of the 1980-1985 Literature (Issue 7). Economic and Social Research Foundation.
[17]  Luoga, E. J., Witkowski, E. T. F., & Balkwill, K. (2000). Subsistence Use of Wood Products and Shifting Cultivation within a Miombo Woodland of Eastern Tanzania, with Some Notes on Commercial Uses. South African Journal of Botany, 66, 72-85.
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0254-6299(15)31053-x
[18]  Malimbwi, R. E., & Zahabu, E. (2014). NAFORMA Process and Biophysical Results.
[19]  Mangora, M. M. (2012). Shifting Cultivation, Wood Use and Deforestation Attributes of Tobacco Farming in Urambo District, Tanzania. Current Research Journal of Social Sciences, 4, 135-140.
[20]  Mertz, O., & Bruun, T. B. (2017). Shifting Cultivation Policies in Southeast Asia: A Need to Work with, Rather than against, Smallholder Farmers. In M. Cairns (Ed.), Shifting Cultivation Policies: Balancing Environmental and Social Sustainability (pp. 27-42). CABI.
https://doi.org/10.1079/9781786391797.0027
[21]  Mshale, B., Mshana, D., & Yared, P. (2012). Improving Agricultural Practices in the Context of REDD Readiness in Lindi Rural District, Tanzania: A Review of Current Agricultural Practices and Recommendations for Project Interventions, Tanzania. Tanzania Forest Conservation Group.
[22]  Ngaiza, R. S. (2012). Kilimo Kwanza: The Declaration of Tanzania’s Agricultural Transformation. In FAO Regional Workshop on an Integrated Policy Approach to Commercializing Smallholder Maize Production (p. 63). University of Nairobi.
[23]  Norrlund, L., & Brus, L. (2004). Agricultural Practices in Relation to Soil Properties and Water Supply in a Miombo Forest Village (p. 107). Minor Field Study, Committee of Tropical Ecology, Uppsala University.
[24]  Raikes, P. (1986). Eating the Carrot and Wielding the Stick: The Agricultural Sector in Tanzania. In J. Boesen, et al. (Eds.), Tanzania: Crisis and Struggle for Survival (pp. 105-141). Scandinavian Institute of African Studies.
[25]  Reed, J. S. (1979). Government Publications Relating to Tanganyika, 1919-1961. EP Microform Limited.
[26]  Stromgaard, P. (1989). Adaptive Strategies in the Breakdown of Shifting Cultivation: The Case of Mambwe, Lamha, and Lala of Northern Zambia. Human Ecology, 17, 427-444.
https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00889499
[27]  Sundet, G. (1997). The Politics of Land in Tanzania. University of Oxford.
[28]  Sunseri, T. (2003). Reinterpreting a Colonial Rebellion: Forestry and Social Control in German East Africa, 1874-1915. Environmental History, 8, 430-451.
https://doi.org/10.2307/3986203
[29]  United Republic of Tanzania (1995). National Land Policy. Government Printer.
[30]  URT (1998). National Forest Policy. Government Printers.
[31]  URT (1999a). National Land Act (and Regulations) No. 4 of 1999. Ministry of Lands and Human Settlements Development.
[32]  URT (1999b). Village Land Act (and Regulations) No. 5 of 1999. Ministry of Lands and Human Settlements Development.
[33]  URT (2002). Forest Act No. 14 of 2002. Tanzania Government Printers.
[34]  URT (2007). Land Use Planning Act No. 6 of 2007. Ministry of Lands and Human Settlements Development.
[35]  van Vliet, N., Mertz, O., Heinimann, A., Langanke, T., Pascual, U., Schmook, B. et al. (2012). Trends, Drivers and Impacts of Changes in Swidden Cultivation in Tropical Forest-Agriculture Frontiers: A Global Assessment. Global Environmental Change, 22, 418-429.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2011.10.009
[36]  Zahabu, E., Eid, T., Kajembe, G., Mbwambo, L., Mongo, C., Sangeda, A., Malimbwi, R., Katani, J., Kashaigili, J., & Luoga, E. (2009). Forestland Tenure Systems in Tanzania: An Overview of Policy Changes in Relation to Forest Management. Department of Ecology and Natural Resource Management Norwegian University of Life Sciences.

Full-Text

Contact Us

service@oalib.com

QQ:3279437679

WhatsApp +8615387084133