Comparing the Zimbabwean and Japanese agrarian experience may sound impossible.
Still, the similarities in the socio-economic and political realities of their respective radical land reforms and grain policies provide scope for such an endeavour.
This book examines the aftermath of Japan's radical land reform and the development of her cooperatives.
It then compares it to the nature and character of the Zimbabwe post-land reform agrarian structure.
The author collected and analysed data from.