Hakizimana, Cyriaque2025-08-262025-08-262024https://hdl.handle.net/10566/20809Debates on the role of commercial farming as a key driver for agrarian change are well established in the agrarian scholarly field. however, they tend to focus on the class and gender dimensions. generational aspects of commercial farming and their implications for rural livelihoods for young people are neglected in this vast literature. this dissertation seeks to fill this gap. it seeks to understand drivers that shape inclusion in and exclusion from commercial farming, outcomes for rural youth, their responses, and how they are gendered. the research presented in this dissertation was conducted in timau region of meru county in kenya. timau was one of the 237 settlement schemes that formed part of the kenyatta-era public schemes programme known as the “million-acre settlement scheme” that redistributed formerly european-owned large-scale capitalist farms to develop a smallholder agricultural sector in kenya. intersecting dynamics of generation, gender, and class determine who has access to agrarian resources, and who benefits from them. this dissertation argues that the limitation of young people’s access to agrarian resources is linked with generational dynamics in land acquisition within the household. the interplay of these factors creates processes of unequal gender and generational distribution of agrarian resources. the youth land scarcity identified in this dissertation, therefore, is proposed to be generationally manufactured to shield and protect the patriarchs’ own socio-economic benefits from commercial farming. generation, gender, and class social relations are important composite elements of the generationally manufactured land scarcity, and their intersection determines the form of young people’s inclusion in or exclusion from commercial farming.enGenerationSocial relationsGerontocracyRural livelihoodsSmallholder commercial farmingGenerational dynamics of commercial farming in highland KenyaThesis