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Multiplex livelihoods in rural Africa: recasting the terms and conditions of gainful employment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 April 2002

Deborah Fahy Bryceson
Affiliation:
Senior Research Fellow, Afrika-Studiecentrum, Leiden, The Netherlands. An earlier extended version of this article was presented at the workshop on ‘Between Town and Country: Livelihoods, Settlement and Identity Formation in Sub-Saharan Africa’, Institute of Social and Economic Research, Rhodes University, East London Campus, South Africa, 27–30 June 1999. A short abstract appeared as ‘Rural Africa at the Crossroads: Livelihood Practices and Policies’, ODI Research Perspectives 52, April 2000. The author wishes to thank all the DARE researchers and participants at the above-named workshop for their comments and criticisms.

Abstract

Citing recent case study evidence from various parts of Africa, this article argues that the income diversification efforts of most rural dwellers over the past decade have been directed at meeting daily needs amidst declining returns to commercial agriculture. Individuals and households have experimented with new forms of livelihood, expanding their non-agricultural income sources, while retaining their base in subsistence farming. Various livelihood patterns are emerging, depending on historical, geographical and agro-ecological factors at local and national levels. Livelihood experimentation has catalysed overlapping arenas of dynamic change, notably disequilibria between households and individual members, tensions between generations, the recalibration of gender power balances, and a search for new social networks. So far this surge of livelihood ‘multiplexity’ has not generated adequate overall levels of gainful employment, technical innovation, purchasing power or welfare improvement. Thus, probing the complex interplay of economic, social, cultural and political dynamics in rural Africa becomes all the more essential for effective policy formulation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2002 Cambridge University Press

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