Review
Tony Waters explains how costly economic development can be and how incompatible are the goals of subsistence farmers, yet he states the case for growth fairly too. This is a highly original work, based on Waters' personal experience of Tanzania, illuminated throughout by social science, and buttressed by rich, unexpected case studies of eighteenth-century Scotland and Daniel Boone's America. It will set tongues wagging in the development agencies. (Eric Jones )
Waters takes us on a journey to the highlands of Scotland, the plains of America, and the savannah of modern Tanzania to display the deep-rooted appeal of subsistence farming.... In a brilliant combination of historical sociology and modern anthropology, Waters forces us to re-examine the views of market theorists, and shows that converting subsistence agriculturalists to industrial life is not a matter of encouraging a smooth 'take-off,' but of wrestling with powerful attachments to a way of life. Breathing new life into classic views of the peasantry and industrial transition, Waters's book should be required reading for development professionals and analysts of economic change. (Goldstone, Jack A. )
Tony Waters...sets out to give a general explanation...in this ambitious and passionately written book....Drawing upon a wide body of anecdotal and historical evidence, he makes a strong case....The book is recommendable....A book that is...greatly accessible and written in an enjoyable style...and whose final conclusions on development work are just remarkable. (
Journal Of Agraraian Change )
This masterful and exhaustive analysis of the role of subsistence farming in a comparative historical and societal perspective is a powerful reminder to all developmentalists - on the left or the right - that social transformation is a long-winding and often painful process. Waters cleverly illustrates the similarities between contemporary Tanzania and historical Scotland and the United States teasing out why the prospect for a transformation to a fully fledged market economy is so much more difficult in the former place. At a point when there is growing interest in informal institutions and the role culture plays in development, this is a timely contribution of interest to the academic community as well as analysts and practitioners in the international development field. (Distinguished Professor Goran Hyden )
About the Author
Tony Waters is Department Chair and Professor of Sociology at California State University, Chico.