Colonial Transformation of The Aembu Land Access and Labour Division Systems in Food Crop Production From 1906- 1963
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Date
2024-09-10
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Journal of History and Cultural Studies
Abstract
This study examined the colonial transformation of the Aembu access to
land and labour division in food crop production from 1906-1963.
Colonial practices and policies undermined the Aembu land and labour
systems in food crop production. Methodologically, the study used
descriptive research design and Articulation of Modes of Production
Theory. The study was conducted in Embu East, Embu West and Embu
North sub-counties of Embu. The study targeted a population of 16,144
people based on the 2019 census. Corroborated data was obtained from
oral, archival and secondary sources to establish the reliability and
validity of the research. The study’s findings were that the creation of
African reserves to pave way for white settlement and labour supply from
Africans led to the abandonment of crop farms since they were far away;
the reserves had limited land sizes with poor soils for the production of
enough food while most of the food storage facilities were destroyed in
the process of migration and that during the political crisis of World
Wars and Mau Mau, labour in food crop production was reduced. It
concluded that colonialism transformed the Aembu land and labour
systems while the co-existence of pre-colonial and colonial access to
land and labour systems on the production of food crops exposed the
community to famines. The study recommends that policymakers should
come up with strategies for promoting traditional forms of access to land
and labour to ensure adequate food crop production.
Description
cmucece@chuka.ac.ke; mmuraya@chuka.ac.ke
Keywords
Aembu, colonial transformation, food crop production, labour, land.
Citation
Mbogo, M. W., Kithinji, C. M., & Muraya, M. (2024). Colonial transformation of the Aembu land access and labour division systems in food crop production from 1906-1963. Journal of history and cultural studies, 3(1), 34-45
