| | While Zimbabwe's smallholder production expansion is well documented, very little in known about social differentiation in the communal lands where most black smallholders live. This article draws on a growing body of post-independence survey data, as well as the authors' research and field experiences, to analyse the structure and dynamics of communal land social differentiation. Utilising a framework which focuses on reproduction and accumulation, four primary social classes are identified: petty-commodity producers: worker peasants; lumpen semi-peasants and the rural petty-bourgeoisie. We then purpose specific processes which may promote and/or constrain rural class formation and speculate about possible impacts on communal land agrarian politics in the 1990s. Class categories and associated processes are presented as hypotheses for further investigation and discussion, rather than as firm research conclusions. Discusses: Agrarian Reform and Social Relations of Production; Post-Independence Empirical Research; Remittances, Accumulation and Reproduction; Processes Promoting Differentiation; Constraints on Differentiation; Class Structure and Agrarian Politics. |