It has been a busy year with our research on 25 years after land reform in Zimbabwe. Biographical interviews have been undertaken with around 100 people from our long-term sample, exploring changes over time, and the 2025 survey was undertaken with around 1500 households across A1 and A2 areas in Mvruwi, Gutu, Masvingo and Matobo, with comparator communal areas nearby. Tracking all the households we had surveyed before plus adding in new ones was a major task! We have also been undertaking some in-depth interviews on ‘social reproduction’ together with Sandra Bhatasara and investigating land use change across our sites with Keen Marozwa. We are now in the midst of compiling all the data and looking forward to a period of analysis and writing during 2026, as well as some follow up fieldwork on key themes.
A highlight of the year was an exchange visit with 16 farmers from our A1 sites (8 men, 8 women chosen by the communities we have been working with over so many years.) They visited each others’ sites during an intensive 10 days in May (see the lead photo). Much learning resulted and the group have kept connected through a WhatsApp group and continue to share ideas as the 2025-26 agricultural season unfolds. Alport Ndebele and team are in the process of finalising a short film on the exchange visit, which we will share across the sites in the new year, as well as posting here.
It’s been a busy year for the blog too, with 45 blogs and so posts nearly every week. We have shared early research results around a series of themes (links to the first in each series below):
As has become traditional, here are the top 20 posts this year in terms of views (of course biased towards the beginning of the year). Older posts continue to be widely viewed and overall there have been around 30k views from many countries across the world. If you missed out on any of the blogs – whether from the blog series or from one-off news posts and alerts of new publications – you can find the links for the festive top 20 of 2025 posts below.