Changing rural–urban linkages in Mali, Nigeria and Tanzania

Author:

Bah Mahmoud1,CissÈ Salmana2,Diyamett Bitrina3,Diallo Gouro1,Lerise Fred4,Okali David5,Okpara Enoch6,Olawoye Janice7,Tacoli Cecilia8

Affiliation:

1. GRAD, BP 5075, Bamako, Mali, tel: 223-218873

2. Rural Economics Institute in Mali (IER).

3. Tanzania Commission for Science and Technology (COSTECH); African Technology Policy Studies Network (ATPS)

4. Department of Urban and Rural Planning at the University College of Lands and Architectural Studies, Dar es Salaam.

5. NGO Nigerian Environmental Study/Action Team (NEST); Ibadan, Nigeria.

6. Imo State University, Owerri, Nigeria.

7. Department of Agricultural Extension and Rural Development, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria; NGO Nigerian Environmental Study/Action Team (NEST); Ibadan, Nigeria

8. IIED, 3 Endsleigh Street, London WC1H 0DD

Abstract

This paper compares and contrasts changing rural–urban linkages drawing on research in six case study areas in Mali, Nigeria and Tanzania. The aim of the research was to gain a better understanding of the ways in which the livelihoods of rural and urban households rely on both rural-based and urban-based resources, and on exchanges between urban and rural areas. The paper describes changes in farming systems under the impact of urban expansion, with special attention to access to land and other natural resources such as water, and also access to markets and the role of traders, especially small-scale operators. It also examines how changing rural and urban contexts, as well as wider national and regional contexts, affect patterns of income diversification and mobility, especially the differential impacts with regard to women and men and to young and older people. Finally, it analyzes the role of the case studies’ urban centres in the economic and social development of their surrounding regions.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Urban Studies,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

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