Reinstating Local Agency: Origins and Development of Irrigated Rice Production in the Usangu Plains, 1920s to 1960

George K. Ambindwile
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Abstract

Many colonial scholars in the 20th century pointed out that agriculture was introduced in the continent from outside, basically Europe and Asia. They refused to accept that African ingenuity had a role to play in the development of agriculture. Premised on this line of thinking, many scholars who studied the Usangu Plains attributed the introduction and development of rice production in the plains to the Baluchi. Drawing from archival, oral and secondary written sources, and working within the framework of local agency and political economy theories, this paper argues that contrary to the popular notions that have attributed irrigated rice farming to the Baluchi community, the establishment of irrigated rice farming in the region was primarily an indigenous initiative of the Sangu. It further recognizes the role-played by the British colonial state in the expansion of irrigated rice farming which has seldom been accounted for by scholars who studied the area under study.
恢复地方代理:乌桑古平原灌溉水稻生产的起源和发展,1920 - 1960年
20世纪的许多殖民学者指出,农业是从外部引进的,主要是欧洲和亚洲。他们拒绝承认非洲人的聪明才智在农业发展中发挥了作用。基于这一思路,许多研究乌桑古平原的学者将水稻生产在平原上的引入和发展归功于俾路支人。根据档案、口述和二手书面资料,并在当地机构和政治经济理论的框架内进行研究,本文认为,与将灌溉水稻种植归因于俾路支社区的流行观念相反,在该地区建立灌溉水稻种植主要是Sangu的土著倡议。它进一步承认了英国殖民国家在扩大灌溉水稻种植方面所发挥的作用,而研究该地区的学者很少考虑到这一点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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