Abstract

Abstract: The New Zealand discharged soldier settlement scheme of the 1920s has been much criticized as being a failure. This paper draws on the existing literature and new case study research to break open ‘failure’ as an undifferentiated term and proposes that it was of three different types relating to what was termed the ‘personal equation’, to debt levels and to broader structural adjustment problems in farming. Each operated at differing scales. This is incorporated into a typology of failure and is put forward as basis for further research.

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