“Land to the Tiller”: Unrealized Agenda of the Revolution

Q3 Arts and Humanities Northeast African Studies Pub Date : 2016-06-28 DOI:10.14321/NORTAFRISTUD.16.1.0039
Abera Yemane-ab
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

ABSTRACT:Land reform was perhaps the single most galvanizing issue of the Ethiopian Revolution. The changes effected in this regard led to the collapse of a social and political order that had prevailed for centuries. The Ethiopian Revolution broke the chains of serfdom and freed the peasants from feudal bondage. Although the archaic and exploitative land tenure system was brought to an end, the revolutionary slogan “land to the tiller” was not realized. The Land Reform Proclamation of 1975, which abolished the landlord-tenant relationship, at the same time instituted a new form of land tenure. It made the state the new landlord over all rural land in the country. The enshrinement of the state as the landlord over all of the rural land empowered it to intervene at will in the economic and political lives of people. This article aims to revisit the revolution’s land reform program and assess some of its legacies. The author’s perspective has been informed by his active involvement in the now largely forgotten Chilalo Agricultural Development Unit (CADU) project of the 1970s and his efforts to advance land reform legislation just before and after the 1974 revolution.
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“耕者有其田”:革命未实现的议程
摘要:土地改革可能是埃塞俄比亚革命中最激动人心的问题。在这方面发生的变化导致了几个世纪以来普遍存在的社会和政治秩序的崩溃。埃塞俄比亚革命打破了农奴制的枷锁,把农民从封建的束缚中解放出来。虽然结束了陈旧的剥削性土地所有制,但“耕者有其田”的革命口号并没有实现。1975年的《土地改革公告》废除了地主-租客关系,同时建立了一种新的土地所有制形式。它使国家成为全国所有农村土地的新地主。国家作为地主的地位凌驾于所有农村土地之上,这赋予了它随意干预人民经济和政治生活的权力。本文旨在回顾革命的土地改革计划,并评估其一些遗产。作者的观点来自于他积极参与1970年代的奇拉洛农业发展单位(CADU)项目,以及他在1974年革命前后推动土地改革立法的努力。
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来源期刊
Northeast African Studies
Northeast African Studies Arts and Humanities-History
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