RE-PEASANTIZATION AND LAND RECLAMATION MOVEMENTS IN MALAWI
本文以马拉维南部Thyolo地区的人民土地组织为例,探讨土地收复运动的兴起,揭示殖民时期以来土地改革历史如何再生产了双重农业体系并加剧土地与劳动不平等,对当代农村运动辩论有参考价值。
This article explores the emergence of land reclamation movements in contemporary southern Malawi through the case of the People's Land Organization in Thyolo. It shows that land reclamation movements are the result of a historical politics of land reform that has reproduced a dual agrarian system and shaped inequalities in land and labour since the colonial period. The article speaks to the debate about contemporary rural movements and employs the concepts of de-peasantization and re-peasantization to describe the tendencies toward the dissolution and reconstitution of the peasantry in the contemporary neo-liberal context. It concludes that the legacies of colonialism and the selective but incomplete integration of worker-peasants into the plantation economy have tended to reproduce the material and symbolic conditions necessary for people to reconstitute themselves as peasants. In this context, land has come to symbolize autonomy and to embody the struggle for socio-economic and political enfranchisement.