Article contents
State Intervention and Agricultural Development in Africa: a Cross-National Study
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2008
Extract
Growing food deficits and declining agricultural productivity per capita in Africa have become the central concern of an increasing number of studies.
- Type
- Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1985
References
page 75 note 1 World Bank, Accelerated Development in Sub-Saharan Africa: an agenda for action (Washington, D.C., 1981), p. 45.Google Scholar
page 75 note 2 Bates, Robert H., Markets and States in Tropical Africa: the political basis of agricultural policies (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1981). Also Sara Berry, ‘African Farmers and the State: the context of agricultural choice’, Workshop on Agricultural Decision Making and Development, Washington, D.C., 9–10 September 1980.Google Scholar
page 75 note 3 Lofchie, Michael F. and Commins, Stephen K., ‘Food Deficits and Agricultural Policies in Tropical Africa’, in The Journal of Modern African Studies (Cambridge), 20, 1, 03 1982, pp. 1–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
page 75 note 4 Vengroff, Richard, ‘Food and Dependency: P.L.480 aid to Black Africa’, in The Journal of Modern African Studies, 20, 1, 03 1982, pp. 27–43;Google ScholarVengroff, Richard and Tsai, Yung Mei, ‘Food Hunger and Dependency: PL480 aid to the Third World’, in Journal of Asian and African Studies (Leiden), 16, 1983;Google Scholar and Wallerstein, Mitchel, Food for War – Food for Peace (Cambridge, Mass., 1980).Google Scholar
page 75 note 5 Feder, Gershon, Just, Richard, and Zilberman, David, Adoption of Agricultural Innovation in Developing Countries (Washington, D.C., 1982).Google Scholar
page 76 note 1 Accelerated Development in Sub-Saharan Africa, p. 45.
page 76 note 2 Berry, , op.cit. p. 4.Google Scholar
page 76 note 3 Sheldon Geller, Robert Charlick, and Yvonne Jones, ‘Animation Rurale and Rural Development: the experience of Senegal’; and Robert Charlick and Richard Vengroff, ‘Animation Rurale and Rural Development: the experience of Upper Volta’, Center for International Studies, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.
page 76 note 4 See, for example, Bryant, Coralie and White, Louise, Managing Development in the Third World (Boulder, 1982);Google ScholarEsman, Milton, ‘Administrative Doctrine and Developmental Needs’, in Morgan, E. Philip (ed.), The Administration of Change in Africa (New York, 1974), pp. 3–26;Google ScholarGeller, Sheldon,‘The Cooperative Movement and Senegalese Rural Development Policy, 1960–1980’, Princeton University, 1984;Google ScholarVengroff, Richard, Development Administration at the Local Level: the case of Zaire (Syracuse, 1983), Foreign and Comparative Studies/African Series, Maxwell School, Syracuse University;Google Scholar and World Bank, World Development Report, 1983 (New York and London, 1983).Google Scholar See also Koehn, Peter, ‘Development Administration and Land Allocation in Nigeria’, E. Philip Morgan, ‘Development Management and Management Development in Africa’, Louis Picard, ‘Development Administration and Political Control: the district administration in Lesotho’, and Richard Vengroff, ‘The Administration of Rural Development: the role of extension agents in Upper Volta and Zaire’, all in Rural Africana (East Lansing), 1984.Google Scholar
page 76 note 5 See especially, Lele, Uma, The Design of Rural Development: lessons from Africa (Baltimore, 1975),Google Scholar and Leonard, David, Reaching the Peasant Farmer (Chicago, 1977).Google Scholar
page 76 note 6 World Development Report, 1983.
page 78 note 1 Accelerated Development in Sub-Saharan Africa, and Food and Agriculture Organisation, FAO Production Yearbook, 1981 (Rome, 1982).Google Scholar
page 78 note 2 Accelerated Development in Sub-Saharan Africa, p. 175.
page 82 note 1 Elbow, Gary, ‘Fertilizer Price Increases and Subsistence Agriculture’, in The Geographical Review (New York), 66, 2, 1976, PP. 230–3,Google Scholar and World Bank, World Development Report, 1982 (New York and London, 1982), p. 51.Google Scholar
- 7
- Cited by