article

Agriculture in the Rif and Tell mountains of North Africa

Mountain research and development12 (4) • Published In 1992 • Pages: 337-347

By: Maurer, Gérard, 1924.

Abstract
This paper challenges the results of much of the earlier research that has drawn a picture of agricultural collapse, land abandonment, and outmigration of the Rif and Tell mountains of the Mghreb of Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia. It shows that there is no simple pattern of rural mountain socioeconomic stagnation and collapse. A much more complicated system of agricultural recession and expansion has occurred with wide diversity in both time and space. These spatial and temporal contrasts are explained by physical, cultural, and political factors including variations in bedrock and soil, local climate, and historical background. While much of the land has been abandoned in certain areas, remittances from out-migrating wage-earners, illegal traffic in hashish, and a host of local developments have led to great improvements in rural village infrastructure and in individual households. For the most part there is widespread agricultural expansion, although this is offset by increased soil erosion and reduced availability of water.
Subjects
Tillage
Cereal agriculture
Topography and geology
Land use
Water supply
Settlement patterns
Cultural identity and pride
Labor supply and employment
Research and development
Real property
Economic planning and development
Internal trade
Aftermath of combat
Environmental quality
External migration
Special crops
Production and supply
Recreational and non-therapeutic drugs
Functional and adaptational interpretations
culture
Berbers of Morocco
HRAF PubDate
2010
Region
Africa
Sub Region
Northern Africa
Document Type
article
Evaluation
Creator Type
Geographer
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Teferi Abate Adem; 2010
Field Date
n.d.
Coverage Date
1950-1992
Coverage Place
Rif, Morocco
Notes
Gerard Maurer
Includes bibliographical references (p. 346-347)
LCCN
82641140
LCSH
Rif (Morocco)