Size isn't everything: narratives of scale and viability in a Tanzanian irrigation scheme

This paper explores tensions over scale and viability in irrigated agricultural development in Tanzania.

Abstract

This paper explores tensions over scale and viability in irrigated agricultural development in Tanzania. A revival of ambition to transform African agriculture has reawakened debate over what type of agriculture can best deliver increased production and poverty reduction for rural populations.

This paper examines these debates through the lens of an ethnographic study of an irrigated rice farm in Tanzania. With a chequered history of state and donor intervention management, Dakawa, Rice Farm in Mvomero District is now collectively farmed by a cooperative society of 鈥榮mall farmers鈥�. It is widely hailed as a success, both of irrigation production, and of 鈥榮mall farmers鈥� in delivering this. However, such narratives of smallness and success obscure a more complex reality in which smallness of scale may be more of a discursive tool than a reflection of empirical reality. Although notions of 鈥榲iability鈥� and 鈥榮uccess鈥� in such development interventions are themselves also contested and depend on perspective, there is evidence that there are fundamental problems of both short- and long-term viability.

This work is part of the 鈥業nnovations to Promote Growth among Small-scale Irrigators in Africa: An Ethnographic and Knowledge-Exchange Approach鈥� project

Citation

Harrison, E., Mdee, A. (2017). Size isn鈥檛 everything: Narratives of scale and viability in a Tanzanian irrigation scheme. The Journal of Modern African Studies, 55(2), 251-273.

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Published 8 May 2017