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1

Shopo, Thomas D. Rethinking Parliament's role in Zimbabwean society. Harare: Publications Office, ZIDS, 1985.

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2

Zinyemba, Ranga M. Zimbabwean drama: A study of Shona and English plays. Gweru, Zimbabwe: Mambo Press, 1986.

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3

Moss, Barbara A. Holding body and soul together: Utilizing women's options in a changing Zimbabwean society. [Harare]: University of Zimbabwe, History Dept., 1988.

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4

The English language and the construction of cultural and social identity in Zimbabwean and Trinbagonian literatures. New York: Peter Lang, 2000.

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5

Lionel, Cliffe, ed. Zimbabwe: Politics, economics, and society. London: Pinter Publishers, 1989.

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6

Sachikonye, L. M. Zimbabwe's lost decade: Politics, development & society. Harare, Zimbabwe: Weaver Press, 2011.

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7

Lesizwe, Themba, and Southern African Trauma Coalition, eds. Civil society and justice in Zimbabwe. Arcadia, South Africa: Published by Themba Lesizwe on behalf of the Southern African Trauma Coalition, 2004.

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8

Mawadza, Aquilina. Zimbabwe in transition: A view from within. Auckland Park, South Africa: Fanele, 2011.

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9

Moyo, Sam. NGOs, the state, and politics in Zimbabwe. Belgravia, Harare, Zimbabwe: SAPES Books, 2000.

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10

Steen, Ann-Belinda. Strengthening civil society: Human rights initiatives in Zimbabwe and Botswana. Copenhagen, Denmark: Danish Centre for Human Rights, 1993.

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11

Baseline study on capacity gaps in the civil society organisation's sector in Zimbabwe. Harare, Zimbabwe: NANGO, 2013.

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12

Chirwa, Christopher H. Zambia: A survey by the Africa Govervance Monitoring and Advocacy Project (AfriMAP), Open Society Initiative Southern Africa (OSISA), Open Society Institute Media Program (OSIMP). Johannesburg, South Africa: Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa, 2010.

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13

All culpable together: Civil society and the fast-track land reform programme in Zimbabwe. Ruwa, Zimbabwe: Southern Institute of Peace-Building and Development, 2010.

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14

Zamchiya, Phillan. Countering electoral manipulation: Strengthening Zimbabwe's chain of democracy choice. Harare, Zimbabwe: Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, 2013.

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15

National Association of Non-Governmental Organisations (Zimbabwe), ed. Child budget analysis and advocacy: Handbook for children and civic society in Zimbabwe. Harare, Zimbabwe: National Association of Non-Governmental Organisations, 2009.

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16

East African Weed Science Conference (17th 1999 Harare, Zimbabwe). Proceedings of the 17th Biennial Weed Science Society Conference for Eastern Africa, Harare, Zimbabwe. Edited by Chivunge O. A and Weed Science Society for Eastern Africa. Harare: WSSEA, 1999.

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17

Masiiwa, Medicine. The fast track resettlement programme in Zimbabwe and options for enhanced civil society participation. Belgravia, Harare: Friedrich-Ebert-Foundation, 2001.

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18

Towards development of a national framework for national healing, integration, and reconciliation in Zimbabwe: November 2009-April 2010. Harare, Zimbabwe: Church and Civil Society Forum (CCSF), 2013.

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19

(Zimbabwe), Rural Market Society. Three year programme, 1989/90-1991/92. Avondale, Harare, Zimbabwe: Southern Africa Foundation for Economic Research, 1989.

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20

National Association of Non-Governmental Organisations (Zimbabwe), ed. Church and civil society submissions: Towards development of a national framework for national healing, integration, and reconciliation in Zimbabwe. Harare, Zimbabwe: National Association of Non-Governmental Organisations, 2010.

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21

A year after the January 2009 SADC Special Summit on Zimbabwe: Whither the inclusive government of Zimbabwe? : a compendium of civil society views. Harare, Zimbabwe: Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, 2010.

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22

War veterans in Zimbabwe's revolution : challenging neo-colonialism & settler & international capital. Harare, Zimbabwe: Weaver Press, 2011.

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23

Rights based approaches to programming and results based management: Resource book for civil society organizations in Zimbabwe. Harare: National Association of Non Governmental Organizations, 2007.

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24

Towards a new role for civil society in economic policymaking: Zimbabwe's structural adjustment participatory review initiative (SAPRI). [Harare?: s.n., 2000.

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25

Islands of white: Settler society and culture in Kenya and Southern Rhodesia, 1890-1939. Durham [N.C.]: Duke University Press, 1987.

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26

National Association of Non-Governmental Organisations (Zimbabwe). Baseline assessment of the legal and policy framework in the operational and regulatory environment of civil society organisations in Zimbabwe. Harare, Zimbabwe: National Association of Non-Governmental Organisations, 2013.

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27

The 6th International Conference of the Africa Materials Research Society: December 11-16, 2011 Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe : book of abstracts. Harare]: Africa M.R.S, 2011.

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28

Zimbabwe agenda for sustainable socio-economic transformation (ZIM ASSET): Towards an empowered society and a growing economy, October 2013-December 2018. Harare: Government of Zimbabwe, 2013.

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29

Civil society dossier to cabinet: A compendium of civil society positions on key issues towards reform and recovery in Zimbabwe : presented on the occasion of the Ministerial Summit, Harare march 27, 2009. Harare: National Association of Non-Governmental Organizations, 2009.

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30

Catholic Centre for Justice, Development, and Peace (Zambia) and Development Associates (Zimbabwe), eds. The impact of HIV/AIDS policies on the productive labour force of civil society and faith based organisations in Zambia and Zimbabwe. Lusaka , Zambia: Catholic Centre for Justice, Development and Peace, Zambia Episcopal Conference, 2004.

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31

National Association of Non-Governmental Organisations (Zimbabwe). Repositioning civil society in the aftermath of the inter party agreement: Consolidated sector report : a report on the state of civil society and projected future direction : strengthening the voice of NGOs in Zimbabwe : Jameson Hotel, Harae 5-7 August, 2009. Harare: National Association of Non-Governmental Organisations, 2009.

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32

International Human Rights Seminar in Zimbabwe on the Role of the Government and Civil Society in Sustainable Development (2002 Victoria Falls, Zimababwe). Executive summary for International Human Rights Seminar in Zimbabwe on the Role of the Government and Civil Society in Sustainable Development: 9-12 December 2002, The Kingdom-Victoria Falls. [Harare?: s.n., 2002.

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33

Z, Muchemwa K., and Muponde Robert, eds. Manning the nation: Father figures in Zimbabwean literature and society. Harare: Weaver Press, 2007.

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34

Shaw, Carolyn Martin. Women against Government. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039638.003.0004.

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This chapter examines the functioning of the feminist NGO Associated Women of Zimbabwe (AWZ) to highlight varieties of feminism and the influence of a political and economic crisis on a feminist organization in Zimbabwe at the turn of the twenty-first century. After providing a brief history of AWZ, the chapter considers its experiences to demonstrate how women consciously organize to fight sexism in Zimbabwean society. It then explores AWZ's role in the political process as it advocated for women and promoted women's civil rights in the context of increasing political competition, electoral violence, and a declining economy. It also discusses cosmopolitan feminism in Zimbabwe and the relationship between AWZ and the state—especially in relation to the politics of inclusion, state-sponsored violence, and economic decline; explains how an organization that once stood against government lost its edge, even as government became more oppressive; and analyzes the fiction of Zimbabwean novelist Tsitsi Dangarembga. The chapter concludes by showing what happens to an NGO dependent on international donors when the money stream begins to dry up.
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35

Ngwabi, Bhebe, Ranger T. O, and International Conference on the Zimbabwe Liberation War (1991 : University of Zimbabwe), eds. Society in Zimbabwe's liberation war. Oxford, UK: J. Currey, 1996.

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36

Foundation, Commonwealth, and Civil Society in the New Millennium Project., eds. Democratic governance in Zimbabwe: Citizen power. Harare, Zimbabwe: Civil Society in the New Millennium Project, 2000.

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37

Process, Community Publishing. Democratic Governance in Zimbabwe: Citizen Power. Civil Society in New Millennium Project, 2000.

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38

Stoneman, Colin, and Lionel Cliffe. Zimbabwe: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regimes Series). Pinter Pub Ltd, 1989.

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39

Stoneman, Colin, and Lionel Cliffe. Zimbabwe: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regimes Series). Pinter Pub Ltd, 1990.

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40

Rich Dorman, Sara. Understanding Zimbabwe. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190634889.001.0001.

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This book seeks to understand the state, nation and political identities that are being forged in modern Zimbabwe, and the nature of control that Robert Mugabe’s ZANU exercises over those political institutions. Focusing on the perspective and experiences of societal groups including NGOs, churches, trade unions, students and academics the book explores how the construction of consent, threat of coercion and material resources are used to integrate social groups into the ruling nationalist coalition, but also how they resist and frame competing discourses and institutions. Taking seriously the discursive and institutional legacies of the nationalist struggle and the liberation war in shaping politics, it explores how independent Zimbabwe’s politics were molded by discursive claims to foster national unity that delegitimize autonomous political action outside the ruling party. Building a new societal coalition entailed the "demobilization" of ZANU(PF)’s original nationalist constituency which had backed it during the liberation war, and the "inclusion" of new groups including donors, white farmers and business interests. It also shows how legal practices and institution-building defused and constrained opportunities for contestation, even while the regime used the security forces to suppress those who challenged its political monopoly or who otherwise resisted incorporation. It thus presents a complex picture of how individuals and groups became bound up in the project of state- and nation-building, despite contesting or even rejecting aspects of it.
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41

Sam, Moyo, Helliker Kirk, Murisa Tendai, and African Institute for Agrarian Studies., eds. Contested terrain: Land reform and civil society in contemporary Zimbabwe. Pietermaritzburg, South Africa: S&S Publishers, 2008.

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42

Coalition, Crisis in Zimbabwe, ed. Zimbabwe and SADC: Setting the record straight. Causeway, Harare, Zimbabwe: Crisis in Zimbabwe Coaliltion, 2003.

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43

Bickle, M. J. GEOLOGY BELINGWE GREENSTONE BELT (Geological Society of Zimbabwe, Special Publications 2). Taylor & Francis, 1993.

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44

Blenkinsop. SUB-SAHARAN ECONOMIC GEOLOGY (Geological Society of Zimbabwe : Special Publication, No 3). Taylor & Francis, 1995.

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45

Shaw, Carolyn Martin. Flame, Nyaradzo, and Pretty. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039638.003.0003.

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This chapter examines three types of women that are central to the book's study of the promises of feminism in Zimbabwe: women combatants/veterans (“Flame”), feminist activists (“Nyaradzo”), and beauty and modeling contestants (“Pretty”). There are seven categories or classes in Zimbabwe, according to education, income, residence, occupation, ownership of property, and attitudes toward family and social change. Groups 3, 4, and 5 constitute the middle class—this is the group to which Flame, Nyaradzo, and Pretty belong. Each of these women wants more from her society, all are eclectic in their principles and goals, and at one time, they each had reason to hope. All resist the stasis of an overwhelming presentism that is an alternative to cruel optimism. The chapter also considers several paradoxes in assessing the effectiveness of women's movements in changing policies in African countries.
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46

Association of Evangelicals in Africa. Ethics, Peace and Justice Commission., Catholic Church. Interregional Meetings of the Bishops of Southern Africa., and Ecumenical Documentation and Information Centre in Southern Africa., eds. A report by the Regional Faith-Based Initiative on Zimbabwe parliametary elections, 31 March 2005. [Harare]: Association of Evangelicals in Africa, Ethics, Peace and Justice Commission, Inter-Regional Meeting of Bishops of Southern Africa & Ecumenical Documentation Centre in Southern Africa, 2005.

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47

University of Zimbabwe. Poverty Reduction Forum. and UNICEF, eds. The humanitarian situation in Zimbabwe: Private sector & civil society perspective : mapping a way forward. [Harare]: Poverty Reduction Forum, 2002.

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48

Shaw, Carolyn Martin. Reflections. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039638.003.0006.

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This book has investigated feminism's contribution to women's power/empowerment as well as conventional feminine powers in Zimbabwe. It has argued that feminism, the development of consciousness of sexism and the willingness to join with others to end discrimination against women, is not always quiet. Sometimes it is very much evident as in the liberation war or in street protests. At other times it is unobtrusive, as in women's inklings that something is wrong at work, without having the words to name that something. The book has also addressed cruel optimism as a promise of a future good life that is thwarted by the political economy, state spectacles of violence, and conventional attachments. This concluding chapter reflects on some of the important lessons that can be learned about middle-class women in Zimbabwe, and more specifically on the promises of freedom and feminism. It suggests that feminism stirs the promise of a better life, but the economy, politics, and society often do not conjoin to realize that promise.
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49

Imagining a Peaceful Society: A Vision of Children’s Literature in a Post-Conflict Zimbabwe. Nordic Africa Institute, 2009.

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50

Rich Dorman, Sara. The Politics of Polarization (1998–2000). Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190634889.003.0005.

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The chapter identifies this period as a key, albeit brief, moment when civil society was able to shape political discourse and practice in Zimbabwe. It first sets out the economic conditions in the late 1990s. It then delineates the changing alignments and increasing polarization between state and society. It traces the origins of the National Constitutional Assembly (NCA), and the unease with which it was met by some NGOs and churches. The ways in which the NCA frames the constitutional debate fundamentally challenges the post-independence record of the Mugabe government, its development agenda and its liberation credentials. The focus of the chapter then turns to the regime’s reaction: both institutionally, in the form of the Constitutional Commission and rhetorically, as it first intensified the nationalist rhetoric of previous decades and then labeled those who chose to work with the NCA as illegitimate interlocutors, disloyal to the state and the legacy of liberation. It concludes with the 2000 constitutional referendum.
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