dr. TM (Tsegaye Moreda) Shegro

Biography

Tsegaye Moreda is an Assistant Professor in Development Studies/Agrarian and Rural Studies at the International Institute of Social Studies (ISS, The Hague) of Erasmus University Rotterdam and a founding member of the Young African Researchers in Agriculture (YARA) network based at the University of the Western Cape, South Africa. At ISS, he is a member of the Political Ecology Research Group and teaching team of the MA in Development Studies, Major in Agrarian, Food and Environmental Studies (AFES). He is the course leader of Agrarian and Food Politics (ISS-4240) and contributes to Political Economy of Agriculture and Environment (ISS-4150) course. He has previously taught a graduate course on the politics of agrarian transformation and development at the College of Humanities and Development Studies (COHD) at China Agricultural University in Beijing. He has also taught various undergraduate courses in Ethiopia, including political geography, economic geography, development theory and practice, and research methods.

He is currently co-guest editing Special Issues of Agriculture and Human Values: "Migrants, Farmers and Farmworkers: The politics of land and labour, production and social reproduction", and Globalizations journal: "The spectacular global land rush and its consequences".

His research interests are in the political economy and sustainability of agriculture and natural resources governance (land, water, forests, sub-soil minerals)  – examined in the era of the global resource rush (various forms of land grabbing, the rise of extractivism, agro-extractivism, large-scale development interventions, neoliberal developmentalism) and environmental and climate change (focusing on narratives of and responses to them, including politics around mitigation and adaptation) – with special emphasis on understanding how contemporary politics around natural resources links to broader questions of social justice, socio-economic transformation, and ecological sustainability. He focuses on understanding the role and location of land politics in global, regional and national trajectories. He also has work and interest in the various forms of political reactions by poor people towards dynamic changes in the political economy (land/property, labour, income, reproduction) of natural resources, including in studying – and at the same time, working with – social movements. Transversal themes in his interest in and treatment of all these issues are conflict, power and political contestations across social classes and identity politics, mediated by and through the state. It is in this context that he also looks into converging social movements partly in reaction to the parallel and overlapping processes of global resource rush and climate change mitigation narratives: agrarian movements, environmental movements, fishers' movements, food sovereignty movements. He works and continues to hone his intellectual skills along the tradition of scholar-activism. His regional focus is on Sub-Saharan Africa.

He is currently a team member of a European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grant awarded project, "Commodity & Land Rushes and Regimes: Reshaping Five Spheres of Global Social Life (RRUSHES-5)" led by Professor Jun Borras. This five-year (2019-2024) research project studies recent transactions in land and land-use change and how these impact the general situation around the issues of food, climate change politics, geopolitics, labour and migration, and state-society relations in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The project mainly focuses on Colombia, Ethiopia and Myanmar. 

(የምርምር ፕሮጀክት ርዕስ:- የግብርና እና ተዛማጅ ዘርፎች ምርቶች/ሸቀጦች፣ የመሬት ወረራ/ቅምያ እና የመሬትአስተዳደር ስርዓት፡ በአምስት አለም አቀፉዊ ተያያዥ የማህበራዊ ጉዳዮች ላይ ያላቸው ተጽህኖ/እንድምታ (RRUSHES-5) (የምግብ ዋስትና ፣ የአየር ንብረት ለውጥ፣ የሰራተኛ/ፍልሰት ጉዳዮች፣ የመንግስት–ዜጎች ግንኙነት/የዜግነት ጉዳዮችእና የጂኦፖለቲካዊ ጉዳዮች ናቸው፡፡)

He is also a member of an ongoing action research project on governance instruments and the intersection between climate change politics, resource grabbing, conflict and political contestations in Mali (with Via Campesina's CNOP) and Nigeria (with Friends of the Earth's ERA), funded by IDRC and anchored by FIAN International.   

Previously, he was a lecturer in the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies at the University of Gondar in Ethiopia. He also held a position of community service coordination in the Research and Community Service Office of the same university.

He holds a B.A. in Geography and Environmental Studies and M.A. in Development Studies from Addis Ababa University and completed a Ph.D. in Development Studies at the International Institute of Social Studies (ISS) of Erasmus University Rotterdam in the Netherlands. He went to a summer school at the STEPS centre at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS), University of Sussex, UK.

International Institute of Social Studies

Assistant professor | Academic staff unit
Email
shegro@iss.nl

Work

  • Tsegaye Moreda Shegro, Jun Borras, Alberto Alonso Fradejas & Z Brent (2018) - Third World Quarterly (Journal) (Editor)
    Activity: Publication Peer-review Academic

Major AFES

Year
2024
Course Code
ISS-AFES-24-25

General Information

Year
2024
Course Code
ISSGENERAL-24-25

3105 Research Paper Preparation

Year
2024
Course Code
ISS-3105-24-25

4150 Political Economy

Year
2024
Course Code
ISS-4150-24-25

4240 Agrarian and Food Politics

Year
2024
Course Code
ISS-4240-24-25

5401 Research Paper

Year
2024
Course Code
ISS-5401-24-25

News regarding dr. TM (Tsegaye Moreda) Shegro

Investigating the social dynamics of access to land and rural youth in Ethiopia

Tsegaye Moreda explores the challenge of young people in rural Ethiopia have in gaining independent access to land.
Farm in Ethiopia

Beyond land rights registration: understanding the mundane elements of land conflict in Ethiopia

In this article, Tsegaye Moredo argues that land conflicts cannot be understood without understanding underlying local governance structures and power relations
Farm in Ethiopia

Private debt as an underestimated root cause of economic conflict

'The awkward struggle: A global overview of social conflicts against private debts', offers a historical glimpse at social conflicts against private debt.
Journal of Rural Studies

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