Skip to content
  • EN
  • FR
  • ES
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Donate
Facebook X Instagram Vimeo Telegram
La Via Campesina – EN
  • TopicsExpand
    • Land, Water and Territories
    • Agroecology, Biodiversity and Peasants’ Seeds
    • Trade Markets and Income
    • Public Policies
    • Peasants’ Rights
    • Climate and Environmental Justice
    • Migrants and Waged Workers
    • Transnational Companies and Agribusiness
  • ArticulationsExpand
    • Youth Articulation
    • Women’s Articulation
    • Diversities
  • Publications
  • MultimediaExpand
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
  • CampaignsExpand
    • Global Campaign for Agrarian Reform
    • Global Campaign for Peasant Seeds
    • Campaign to Stop Violence against Women
    • Campaign against Agrotoxics
    • Campaign for a Binding Treaty
search
  • EN
  • FR
  • ES
search
La Via Campesina – EN
Facebook X Instagram Vimeo Telegram
Land, Water and Territories

ZIMSOFF co-organises a dialogue on the state of land, seeds and food with allies

11 July 2016

Popular University of Social Movements gathers in Harare: social movements and academics to dialogue on the state of land, seeds and food in SADC

MEDIA ADVISORY

(Harare, July 11, 2016) – Over the past 15 years, Zimbabwe’s fast track land reform programme has redressed colonial land inequalities and now provides lessons for its neighbours on how to democratise land ownership and broaden economic participation. From July 12-15, various social movements and academics from Zimbabwe, Mozambique, South Africa, Ghana, Spain and Portugal will gather in Zimbabwe’s capital, Harare to discuss and debate the state of land, seeds, food, climate and people in Southern Africa. The event is being held under the banner/auspices of Portugal’s Popular University of Social Movements, known by its Portuguese acronym, UPMS.

Social movements have powerfully influenced Zimbabwe’s land reform, and movements’ role in pressuring governments for land reform is today more important than ever. The Southern African region’s food deficit has risen in the past five years due to limited agricultural support by the state and climate linked weather vagaries. Land investments and changes to seed laws and the growing impacts of climate change are also shaping regional food security.

What can the rest of the region learn from Zimbabwe’s land reform process? How can we understand regional policies regarding land, seeds, food and water? What responses can we collectively push for to address the challenges facing Zimbabwe and the wider region on the issues of food, land, seeds, water and climate? These are some of the key points to be debated at this UPMS workshop.

Boaventura de Sousa Santos, director of the Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra, said, “This UPMS workshop brings together academics and leaders of peasants’ movements, women’s movements and housing movements to focus on land, seeds and food, one of the most urgent and important topics in a time of savage neoliberal capitalism, land grabbing, finance speculation on commodities and land.”

Building alliances among social movements is the only way to develop an effective resistance against such powerful interests, he added.

The Popular University of Social Movements’ workshops are designed to promote the sharing of knowledge born out of experiences of both academic research and struggles on the ground. It is a process of broadening, articulating and enhancing forms of struggle against neoliberal globalization, capitalism, colonialism, sexism and other relations of domination and oppression; a process of rethinking and renew knowledge for political and social struggles, and developing new paradigms of social transformation from the Global South.

According to Elizabeth Mpofu, chairperson of Zimbabwe Organic Smallholder Farmers Forum (ZIMSOFF),”This event is happening at the appropriate time. We are confronted by various social, economic and political challenges. It is the right time to sit down and analyze how far we have walked since 2000 and what is the reality in our neighboring countries.”

Thandiwe Chidavarume, from the Rural Women’s Assembly in Zimbabwe said, “Rural women farmers demand climate justice, participation in decision making and recognition of their immense contribution to food security and food sovereignty. This event provides a space to learn from and share with others experiences relevant to shaping solutions to these issues.”

Walter Chambati, deputy executive director of Sam Moyo African Institute of Agrarian Studies sees this workshop as a space that “presents an opportunity to reflect on Zimbabwe’s land reform successes and constraints. There can’t be a better platform for social movements from the global south to meet and share experiences on issues related to land, food and climate justice in the interests of promoting food sovereignty”.

The Harare UPMS workshop is co-hosted by Zimbabwe Organic Smallholder Farmers Forum, the Sam Moyo African Institute of Agrarian Studies, the Rural Women’s Assembly and the ALICE Project of the Centre for Social Studies.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

www.upmsharare2016.org

Email: nyoni.ndabezinhle@viacampesina.org | boa.monjane@gmail.com

Phone: +263772441909

RELATED NEWS:

  1. La Via Campesina Denounces Land Annexation by the Occupying and Apartheid State of Israel
  2. Nepal Needs Comprehensive Land Reform, Not Land Banks
  3. ‘World Bank Out of Land!’ – 80+ organizations denounce World Bank’s 2024 Land Conference

Post navigation

Previous Previous
Agroecology Learning Exchanges in Uganda
NextContinue
La Via Campesina | e-Newsletter | June, 2016
SUPPORT THE PEASANT MOVEMENT

LATEST NEWS FROM ARTICULATIONS

  • Voices from Dominican Republic: ‘Food Sovereignty is the Right to Life and the Right to Live Well.’13 May 2025
  • Kenyan Peasants League: GMOs and Hybrid Seeds Trap Peasant Women in a Cycle of Debt and Depression9 May 2025

LATEST STATEMENTS & PRESS RELEASES

  • Peasants Belong on Farms, Not in Prisons. Release South Korean Peasant Leader Hyun Jin-hee Immediately!29 April 2025
  • Food sovereignty is not possible without financial sovereignty, warn small-scale food producers and grassroots organisations21 April 2025
  • From Carajás to Gaza: Peasant Struggles Are Global — To Defend Land, Water, and Territories for Life!17 April 2025
Organizations
Countries
Peasants
Regions

GET INVOLVED

Donate to La Via Campesina
Subscribe to Our Newsletter

LVC POLICY ADVOCACY

  • FAO – CFS
  • Seed Treaty (ITPGRFA)
  • UN Decade of Family Farming
  • Food Systems for People
  • UN Human Rights Council

LVC Missions

  • Palestine Solidarity
  • Haiti Mission
  • Colombia Peace Process
  • Peasant Alerts
  • Global Solidarity Statements

Social networks

Facebook X Instagram Vimeo Telegram
  • Home
  • About Us
  • LVC Schools
  • Regions and Members
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap
  • Search
  • Contact us
Scroll to top
  • Topics
    • Land, Water and Territories
    • Agroecology, Biodiversity and Peasants’ Seeds
    • Trade Markets and Income
    • Public Policies
    • Peasants’ Rights
    • Climate and Environmental Justice
    • Migrants and Waged Workers
    • Transnational Companies and Agribusiness
  • Articulations
    • Youth Articulation
    • Women’s Articulation
    • Diversities
  • Publications
  • Multimedia
    • Videos
    • Podcasts
  • Campaigns
    • Global Campaign for Agrarian Reform
    • Global Campaign for Peasant Seeds
    • Campaign to Stop Violence against Women
    • Campaign against Agrotoxics
    • Campaign for a Binding Treaty