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Intercultural, interdisciplinary, and transdisciplinary research interfaces confront researchers with considerable challenges. Towards Shared Research portrays how scholars from different disciplinary and geographical origins and at various academic career stages strive for a more inclusive and better understanding of knowledge about African environments.The book is addressed to researchers, facilitators, and policy-makers to make a case for participatory and integrative approaches resulting in systemic and co-created analyses.
1. EINLEITUNG1.1 Thesen und Fragestellung1.2 Methode2. REGULATIONSTHEORIE2.1 Akkumulationsregime und Regulationsweise2.2 Institutionelle Formen3. AKKUMULATIONSREGIMES3.1 FORDISMUS3.1.1 Akkumulation und Regulation3.1.2 Das fordistische Lohnverhältnis3.1.3 Krise des Fordismus3.2 POST-FORDISMUS3.2.1 Markt statt Monopol3.2.2 Das postfordistische Lohnverhältnis3.2.2.1 Partizipierende Arbeitsformen3.2.2.2 Einbindungen von Arbeitskräften3.3 FINANZMARKT-KAPITALISMUS3.3.1 Shareholder Value3.3.1.1 Corporate Governance3.3.1.2 Unternehmenssteuerung im Shareholder Value3.3.2 Die Bedeutsamkeit von Finanzmärkten3.3.2.1 Krise des Finanzmarkts3.3.2.2 Folgen für die Realwirtschaft4. ZUSAMMENFASSUNG5. LITERATURVERZEICHNIS
The Contested Floodplain tells the story of institutional changes in the management of common pool resources (pasture, wildlife, and fisheries) among Ila and Balundwe agro-pastoralists and Batwa fishermen in the Kafue Flats, in southern Zambia. It explains how and why a once rich floodplain area, managed under local common property regimes, becomes a poor man's place and a degraded resource area. Based on social anthropological field research, the book explains how well working institutions in the past, regulating communal access to resources, have turned into state property and open access or privatization. As a basis for analysis, the author uses Elinor Ostrom's design principles for well working institutions and the approach of the New Institutionalism by Jean Ensminger. The latter approach focuses on external factors and change in relative prices. It explains how local actors face changing bargaining power and use different ideologies to legitimize and shape resource use regulations. The study focuses on the historic developments taking place since pre-colonial and colonial times up to today. Haller shows how the commons had been well regulated by local institutions in the past, often embedded in religious belief systems. He then explains the transformation from common property to state property since colonial times. When the state is unable to provide well functioning institutions due to a lack in financial income, it contributes to de facto open access and degradation of the commons. The Zambian copper-based economy has faced crisis since 1975, and many Zambians have to look for economic alternatives and find ways to profit from the lack of state control (a paradox of the present-absent state). And while the state is absent, external actors use the ideology of citizenship to justify free use of resources during conflicts with local people. Also within Zambian communities, floodplain resources are highly contested, which is illustrated through conflicts over a proposed irrigation scheme in the area. The different actors and interest groups use ideologies such as citizenship vs. being indigenous, ethnic identity vs. class conflict, and modernity vs traditional way of life to legitimize land claims.
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