Joint venture Schemes in Limpopo Province and their outcomes on smallholder farmers livelihoods

cg.contributor.centerInternational Water Management Institute - IWMIen_US
cg.contributor.centerThe French Agricultural Research Center for International Development - CIRADen_US
cg.contributor.centerPEGASYSen_US
cg.contributor.crpCGIAR Research Program on Dryland Systems - DSen_US
cg.contributor.funderNot Applicableen_US
cg.contributor.project-lead-instituteInternational Water Management Institute - IWMIen_US
cg.coverage.countryZAen_US
cg.coverage.regionSouthern Africaen_US
cg.creator.idVan Koppen, Barbara: 0000-0002-7707-8127en_US
cg.date.embargo-end-date2015-12-31en_US
cg.isijournalISI Journalen_US
cg.journalPhysics and Chemistry of the Earthen_US
cg.subject.agrovocirrigationen_US
dc.contributorVan Koppen, Barbaraen_US
dc.contributorSithole, Pinimidzaien_US
dc.contributorBourblanc, Magalieen_US
dc.creatorMapedza, Everistoen_US
dc.date.accessioned2016-02-01T21:42:22Z
dc.date.available2016-02-01T21:42:22Z
dc.description.abstractJoint Venture schemes based on the floppy irrigation technology are being promoted in the post- Apartheid South Africa's Limpopo Province. Access to land and water resources in South Africa are largely viewed as a mechanism for re-dressing the Apartheid injustices. This research was part of a broader applied research to help inform irrigation practise in the Limpopo Province. The research used literature review, key informant interviews and a questionnaire survey. The overall research question sought to understand how the Joint Venture Schemes had benefited the smallholder farmers. This paper argues that the joint venture partnership created a new injustice. Firstly, the Joint Venture Scheme design is fundamentally a bad idea which disempower farmers not only to water access but also land as well. The choice of the ‘efficient’ floppy irrigation technology was made by the state and entailed that land had to be managed as a single unit. In order to make more effective use of this highly sophisticated new technology, the smallholder farmers also needed to go into a joint venture partnership with a white commercial farmer. By virtue of signing the Joint Venture agreement the farmers were also forfeiting their land and water rights to be used for crop production. The smallholder farmers lost access to their water and land resources and were largely relegated to sharing profits e when they exist - with hardly any skills development despite what was initially envisaged in the Joint Venture partnership. Secondly, the implementation of the JVS has been skewed from the start which explains the bad results. This paper further shows how the negative outcomes affected women in particular. As the smallholder farmers argue the technological options chosen by the state have excluded both male and female farmers from accessing and utilising their land and water resources in order to improve their livelihoods; it has entrenched the role of the state and the private interests at the expense of the smallholder male and female farmers in whose name the irrigation funding was justified. The paper concludes by offering recommendations on how joint venture schemes can be genuinely participatory and meaningfully address the rural livelihoods.en_US
dc.formatPDFen_US
dc.identifierhttps://mel.cgiar.org/reporting/downloadmelspace/hash/Y5DTE6JJ/v/af6f60b0daa4b54784fc8502238bd60een_US
dc.identifier.citationEveristo Mapedza, Barbara Van Koppen, Pinimidzai Sithole, Magalie Bourblanc. (14/11/2015). Joint venture Schemes in Limpopo Province and their outcomes on smallholder farmers livelihoods. Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, pp. 1-7.en_US
dc.identifier.statusLimited accessen_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11766/4220
dc.languageenen_US
dc.publisherElsevieren_US
dc.rightsCC-BY-NC-4.0en_US
dc.sourcePhysics and Chemistry of the Earth;(2015) Pagination 1-7en_US
dc.subjectjoint ventureen_US
dc.titleJoint venture Schemes in Limpopo Province and their outcomes on smallholder farmers livelihoodsen_US
dc.typeJournal Articleen_US
dcterms.available2015-11-14en_US
dcterms.extent1-7en_US

Files