Learning from past and current food security efforts and challenges in Zimbabwe : the years 1430–2020
Abstract
Zimbabwe has been experiencing food insecurity for many centuries. This study sought to
explore and learn from Zimbabwe’s past and current food security (FS) efforts and
challenges, through three historical periods, namely the precolonial, colonial and
postcolonial, from about 1430 to 2020. The year 1430 marks the establishment of the
Monomotapa state, one of the starting points for Zimbabwe’s own national reconstruction.
Adopting a qualitative paradigm, data were obtained using document review and
interviewing 85 purposively selected key informants, some of whom were found using
snowballing. The study found that the adopted FS strategies during the precolonial,
colonial and postcolonial periods were dynamic and mainly derived by new political
agendas and crises. The food production and storage aspects of the colonial period were
built around agricultural extension services and Grain Marketing Board strategies. The
postcolonial period FS initiatives pivoted on humanitarian and development programs.
Zimbabwe’s FS initiatives across the three historical periods remain susceptible to various
challenges (droughts, political antagonism, bureaucracy, partisanship, corruption,
incapacitation and weak support systems). As such, Zimbabwe’s food insecurity levels
remain far away from being a reality, unless the identified challenges are taken head-on by
all stakeholders. Therefore, the study recommends that informed local wisdom be given
space in finding a lasting solution to food insecurity. Meanwhile, multistakeholder
inclusivity, knowledge development and management should be made the crux of FS-related
initiatives. This could foster new partnerships and encourage the ethic of working
together and participation towards ensuring FS.