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Zimbabwe's historical land question

The neutrality of this article is disputed.

Zimbabwe's Land Question is the problem of the racial imbalance in the ownership and distribution of land which favours Zimbabwean whites, who constitute less than 1% of the population, and grossly disadvantages black Zimbabweans, who constitute more than 99% of population. This problem is a legacy of almost a century of British racist, colonial and imperialist domination of Zimbabwe. At Zimbabwe's independence in 1980, more than 80% of arable land in the country was in the hands of white Zimbabweans, foreign businesses and multinational corporations, in other words, less than 1% percent of the population possessed 80% of the nation's arable land. This situation came about as a result of a deliberate and systematic policies and programmes of dispossession of the majority black population implemented by almost a century of successive white-supremacist colonial governments, the last of which was led by Ian Smith.

Content Outline: 1. Land ownership before colonisation (Before 1890) 2. History of the creation of Zimbabwe's Land Question (1890-1980) 3. Zimbabwe's Land Question in the Post-Independence era (1980 - present) 4. Zimbabwe's Land Question: a socio-economic and cultural background and commentry