Class Dynamics of Agrarian Change
Class Dynamics of Agrarian Change
Class Dynamics of Agrarian Change
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Class Dynamics of Agrarian Change
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Introduction: The Political Economy of Agrarian Change
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Class Dynamics of Agrarian Change
Finally, the term “family farm” often conflates farms that are
family owned, family managed or worked with family labour. Some
“family farms” combine all three characteristics, but others do not,
as I explain further in Chapter 6.
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Introduction: The Political Economy of Agrarian Change
Women weed the coffee, they pick coffee, pound it and spread
it to dry. They pack and weight it. But when the crop gets a
good price, the husband takes all the money. He gives each of
his wives 200 shillings and climbs on the bus the next morn-
ing… most go to town and stay in a boarding house until they
are broke. Then they return and attack their wives, saying ”why
haven’t you weeded the coffee?” This is the big slavery. Work
had no boundaries. It is endless. (Rural woman activist quoted
in Mbilinyi 1990: 120–1)
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Class Dynamics of Agrarian Change
The reason for all this was land speculation: two thousand
hectares of virgin forest would be cleared, a thousand turned
over to pasture, and then rubber tappers were deprived of
their livelihood. From this developed the struggle for extrac-
tive resources in Amazonia, which is also a tribal area. The
Indians… do not want private property in land, we want it
to belong to the Union and rubber tappers to enjoy usufruct
rights…. [In 1980] a very important leader, who headed all the
movements in Amazonia, was murdered. The landowners…
had him killed. Seven days later the workers took their revenge
and murdered a landowner. This is the way justice operates.
(Mendes 1992: 162, 168, interview published after Mendes’
murder on December 22, 1988)
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Introduction: The Political Economy of Agrarian Change
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Class Dynamics of Agrarian Change
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Introduction: The Political Economy of Agrarian Change
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Class Dynamics of Agrarian Change
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Introduction: The Political Economy of Agrarian Change
Note
1. Numbers of “small farmers” in the South are often exaggerated, some-
times greatly so, by those “taking the part of peasants” (see further
below), for example, Joan Martinez-Alier (2002) and Samir Amin
(2003), who give figures of two and three billion respectively.
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