Multiple vulnerabilities locking rural communities in the South Eastern low-veld of Zimbabwe

Type Journal Article - Journal of Economics and Sustainable Development
Title Multiple vulnerabilities locking rural communities in the South Eastern low-veld of Zimbabwe
Author(s)
Volume 5
Issue 19
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2014
Page numbers 79-88
URL http://ir.msu.ac.zw:8080/jspui/bitstream/11408/1729/1/J. Mutambara 3.pdf
Abstract
The study analyses the multiple vulnerabilities of the rural communities. This is an exploratory qualitative case
study. One hundred households from ward 20 and 22 participated in this study through questionnaires, Focus
Group Discussions (FGDs) and semi-structured interviews. The average household size was 8 with 30% of the
households having a member who was chronically ill while orphans were reported to be present in 54% of the
households. The livelihood base was largely agriculturally based where over 53% of them lacked the lacked
requisite productive assets for communal faming. Ninety nine percent had experienced crop failures in the 3
years preceding the study, attributed mainly to insufficient rainfall. Production levels for both field crops and
gardening activities were exceptionally low and the markets were poor. The boreholes for the majority of the
households and the two irrigations schemes in the two wards were under breakdown. The communities were
vulnerable to more frequent floods, droughts, dangerous wild animal and diseases. The value of the research
is that no known study has invoked a holistic approach to study multiple vulnerabilities in rural areas of
Zimbabwe. This exploratory study attempt to unravel some of the subtle complexities underlying the
vulnerabilities of rural communities in Zimbabwe in a view to recommend empirically based solutions to unlock
their potential.

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