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Full Description
On the northern periphery of Nairobi, in southern Kiambu County, the city's expansion into a landscape of poor smallholders is bringing new opportunities, dilemmas, and conflicts. Drawing on extensive ethnographic fieldwork, Peter Lockwood examines how Kiambu's 'workers with patches of land' struggle to sustain their households as the skyrocketing price of land ratchets up gendered and generational tensions within families. The sale of ancestral land by senior men turns would-be inheritors, their young adult sons, into landless and land-poor paupers, heightening their exposure to economic precarity. Peasants to Paupers illuminates how these dynamics are lived at the site of kinship, how moral principles of patrilineal obligation and land retention fail in the face of market opportunity. Caught between joblessness, land poverty and the breakdown of kinship, the book shows how Kiambu's young men struggle to sustain hopes for middle-class lifestyles as the economic ground shifts beneath their feet.This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.
Contents
Introduction; 1. Ten million beggars: from peasants to paupers on the edge of the city; 2. Hopeless consumptions: 'hanging on' to the future amidst destitution; 3. Retaining land, claiming morality: debating labour, legacy, and virtue at the end of the land; 4. Household sustainers: women's work in the shadow of male poverty; 5. 'Women Only Hustle for Themselves': men's mistrust and women's lost faith in marriage; 6. Enclosing property, containing envy: inheritance, gender and land conflict in urbanising Kiambu; 7. 'There is only starting at the bottom': Downward mobility and the future at the end of the land; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.



