Small-scale agricultural producers in the peripheral world are often
condescendingly assumed to be a single social class (‘the
peasantry’) to be pitted against the state or corporation. This book
challenges this rather idealistic view by demonstrating that under
current capitalist social relations (competition, efficiency and
productivity, and profit maximisation), these agricultural producers
have been differentiated into different agrarian classes by
exploitation. By comparing two different contexts of local agrarian
change in Indonesia—rice cultivation in Java and oil palm in
Sumatra—this book exposes the different class locations of the
agrarian classes among petty agricultural producers and the class
relations between them. These are often inextricably linked to gender,
clanship and generational issues. The power of class dynamics
crucially shapes how agricultural production in both rice and oil palm
is organised. The share received by different agrarian classes from
the production site then prominently shapes the different nature of
class reproduction for each agrarian class. This analysis demonstrates
that the different agrarian classes possess different capacities and
responses in their relation to the state or corporations. Any real
emancipation attempt in the Indonesian countryside (and beyond) must
start from a proper understanding of these class dynamics. This book
marks a significant contribution to the literature on agrarian change,
the political economy of development, rural development and Marxist
political economy.
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Class, Production and Reproduction in Indonesia
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781000630565
Publisert
2022
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter