PIA 2528 Week Six. Paper Requirement- Reminder  Individual research paper (15 pages) and Panel Presentation - 30% of Grade;  Based Upon your individual.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CHAPTER 6 I. Human Systems A. Economic Geography
Advertisements

Agricultural Transformation and Rural Development
The Imperative of Agricultural Progress and Rural Development
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 9 Agricultural Transformation and Rural Development.
PIA 2528 Governance, Local Government and Civil Society Week Seven.
Agricultural Growth Corridors Presentation by Sean de Cleene, Vice President Business Development, Yara International and Vice Chair Kilimo Kwanza Growth.
In Pursuit of Liberty in China Kate Zhou University of Hawaii Grass Root Institute International Seminar “Challenges For A Free Society In The 21 Century”
Chapter 6: Agriculture Pre-industrial agricultural forms and regions Commercial agriculture and trade U.S. agricultural policy Sustainable agriculture.
Chapter 10: Agricultural and Rural Development. Contribution of Agriculture Produce – food to meet basic nutritional needs – raw materials to help the.
LAND OUTSOURCING AND AGRO- INVESTMENT IN AFRICA REBUILDING CAPACITY FOR POLICY ANALYSIS AND ‘PRO-POOR’ POLICY MAKING IN AFRICA Prosper B. Matondi and Mandivamba.
Sweden This Is A Cool Whip Production. The Basics Official Name Official Name Kingdom of Sweden Kingdom of Sweden Government Government Constitutional.
Agricultural Policy Analysis Prof. Samuel Wangwe Executive Director REPOA 28 th July 2012.
Key Issue 1 Where did Agriculture Originate?
Where Are More and Less Developed Countries Distributed?
Land Reform – Linking Research to Better Outcomes Mwangi wa G ĩ th ĩ nji University of Massachusetts-Amherst The Changing Global Landscape in Rural Development.
Life Impact | The University of Adelaide University of Papua New Guinea Economic Development Lecture 8: Agriculture.
United States Human geography.
Chapter 18 – Policies Aimed at Raising the Income of the Poor.
National Policy and Strategy for Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries 15 March, 2004.
Agriculture Sector Structure and Restructuring Dang Kim Son IPSARD/MARD 1.
PIA 2096/2490 Foreign Aid Capstone and Topics Course.
Developing Countries and Globalization Lecture 20.
Economics and Politics
PIA 2528 Governance, Local Government and Civil Society Week Six.
AGRICULTURE AND FOOD SECURITY IN AFRICA Maj Bilal Sadiq Gondal.
PIA 2501 ORGANIZATIONS, INSTITUTIONS AND DEVELOPMENT: THE ROLE OF NGOs.
The Places We Live
Bellringer We will have a series of political cartoons to introduce you to various economic systems On a piece of paper, number 1-8 and answer the questions.
CHANGE OVER TIME ESSAYS Five Handy Examples.
Youth Employment in Sub-Saharan Africa Louise Fox ploymentreport ploymentreport.
Economics Chapter 18 Economic Development
PIA 2528 Week Six. Historical Patterns Land, Rural Development and Human Resource Development.
PIA 2528 Civil Society: A Conceptual Framework. Review- Five Themes 1. Democracy 1. Governance 2. Local Government 3. Civil Society 4. Institutional State.
Haley Claunch Tessa Drews Alexandra Nelson Chapter 7 Agriculture and Rural Geography.
Land and Labor Dr. George Norton Agricultural and Applied Economics Virginia Tech Copyright 2009 AAEC 3204.
Agriculture and Agribusiness in Southeast Europe: an Overview Nancy Cochrane Economic Research Service USDA Washington DC May 20, 2008.
PIA 2501: Public Policy and Management ORGANIZATIONS, INSTITUTIONS AND DEVELOPMENT: THE ROLE OF NGOs.
The Political -Isms By Sean Rhoades.
PIA 2528 Week Seven. The Public Service THE RELATIONSHIP TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
A modern term used to describe the changes in societies and the world economy that result from dramatically increased international trade and cultural.
Support to Livestock Production and Marketing in Traditional Rainfed Farming Areas August, 28 – MDTF N OC Meeting Initial Project Proposal GNU Ministry.
Agriculture Caty Brown. Agricultural Revolutions First Agricultural Revolution- Neolithic Revolution Saw the human development of seed agriculture and.
EAST ASIA III (CHAPTER 9: ). THE JAKOTA TRIANGLE CHARACTERISTICS  Great cities  Enormous consumption of raw materials  State-of-the-art industries.
PIA 2528 Local Government, Governance and Civil Society.
PIA 3393 Development studies. Week Ten Debates about Rural Development.
Bellringer BACKPACKS AND ID’S
Cultures of Western Europe. 1-What has caused the economies of Western Europe to grow? The economies of Western Europe have grown because of productive.
Intergovernmental Relationships PIA Self-Study Plans  Must be week by week, beginning at week one and going through the end of the semester  There.
Louis A. Picard Graduate School of Public and International Affairs University of Pittsburgh.
Intergovernmental Relationships PIA Intergovernmental Relationships The Nature of Relationships.
PIA 2528 Governance, Local Government and Civil Society Week Seven.
,. Upon completion of this seminar you will be able to:  Understand the diverse, dynamic interaction between political and economic institutions in developing.
MOZAMBIQUE PILOT LEARNING ABOUT WHAT WORKS TO IMPROVE FARM JOBS THROUGH AGGREGATOR MODELS Ian Walker April 18, 2016.
Economics Social History
Features of the Development Project
ECONOMIC GROWTH FACTORS in Asia
Economic Systems Day 1: SWBAT: Compare and Contrast the advantages and disadvantages of a Free Enterprise System and a Traditional economy by evaluating.
IDEOLOGY Liberalism Resulted from Breakdown of feudalism in Europe and the emergence of capitalist society. -Liberalism reflected the aspirations of middle.
Ignorance Project
Key Issue 1 Where did Agriculture Originate?
Applying a Territorial Lens to Rural Transformation
HOW TO READ MODERN LATIN AMERICA
Chapter 2 The Historical Development of Capitalism
Overview of 1750 – 1914 The birth of the Modern Age
The Imperative of Agricultural Progress and Rural Development
Chapter 21 Section 1.
Agricultural Revolutions
PIA 3393 Development studies.
The Historical Development of Capitalism
2006 and 2015 CCOT Labor Systems (Africa, Latin America/Caribbean, Russia, North America)
Presentation transcript:

PIA 2528 Week Six

Paper Requirement- Reminder  Individual research paper (15 pages) and Panel Presentation - 30% of Grade;  Based Upon your individual Work Plan;  All materials referenced should be cited in either the correct APA or University of Chicago style. Incorrect citations will cause your submissions to be down-graded.

Historical Patterns Land, Rural Development and Human Resource Development

Catch Up Discussion Huntington, Clash of Civilizations Laura Meixell Allen, “Dark Continent Sarah Tylka Isabel Allenda- “Clarissa” Anh Ninh

Catch Up Discussion, Two Manning, Francophone Africa Sara Tylka Ida Bormentor Graham Greene, The Lawless Roads Anh Ninh

Governance and Sovereignty "[T]ransformation (and globalization) has led to a reinvention of government and what it does" - Anonymous

Historical Patterns of Governance Paternalism- Monarchy, Theocracy and Authoritarianism Authority Linked to the Control of Land (and Water)- Feudalism

Three Sub-Themes Governance:  Land and Water Use  Rural Change  Human Skills Development

The Evolution of the Rural Community 1. Hunter-gatherers: Age-grade societies 2. Settled Subsistence Agriculturalists

The Evolution of the Rural Community-2 3. Cattle Keeping 4. Plantations, Commercial Farms and Agri-Business 5. So-Called Communal Tenure

Traditional: Communal The term is misleading- there are an infinite number of land relationships- Note Three 1. Use same land for individual benefit (cattle rearing)

Communal Land 2. People use same land and pool proceeds- aspiration in socialist countries. (Communalism): Little evidence in traditional society COLLECTIVE FARMS AND FARM FACTORIES

Communal Land 3. Individual use of land for individual gain a. without legal tenure b. no sale or disposal of land c. no collateral

The Problem of Landlordism Tenancy relationship to large hacienda, plantation or commercial agricultural enterprise In much of the world, Land is traditional controlled by land-lords Vast majority of rural peasants in some form of tenancy relationships

Landlordism Serfdom: legal linkage to land and ownership Small scale subsistence agriculturalist- produce for food Reality: Peasants- dependency relationship to land

Rural Socialism as an ideology in the 1960s 1. Peasant collectives and Communal state farms- Soviet Union 2. Voluntary collectives- Ujamaa villages in Tanzania 3. Move the peasant away from individualized production (China) 4. Ideal: village level economies of scale 5. Reality: Collectives, prefectoralism and state enterprises (State Agri-Collectives

Modernization- Western (and to some Colonial) Land Divisions a. Usufruct: Individual ownership and control of land with rights of transfer, inheritance and sale b. Landed elites- landed aristocracy c. MNCs as plantation farmers- Firestone, Dole and Unilever

Individual Land Tenure: Results Landless Rural Workers- Sell their labor in cities, to plantations, to small farmers or as a labor export (regionally or internationally) The realities and limits of collective finance: From Burial Societies to micro- credit schemes How to define individual relationship to land: FAILURE OF LAND TENURE REFORM

Rural Development and civil society Induced Rural Transformation- Approaches 1. Radical Transformation- urbanization a. Primacy of Industrialization b. Emphasis on infrastructure and mechanization of farming

Rural Development 2. Green Revolution: Variant of above. Capital intensive and export oriented. (Landlordism?) a. Focus is primarily on Technical (seeds, equipment- focus is on extension and technical) b. Economies of scale mean large farms

Rural Development 3. Small holder approach- Primacy is on rural sector INTEGRATED RURAL DEVELOPMENT

Rural Development and Governance 1. Primacy of social development, health, education, community development 2. Small holder peasant sector 3. Stresses the importance of individual land tenure and producer cooperatives in marketing 4. Links with local government structures: Village Development Committees 5. Role for Civil Society Groups

Problem: The Capitalist/Commercial Farming- Lack of an Alternative and Failure of Collective Agriculture Failure of and agricultural transformation except for parts of Southeast Asia (plus war and weather) Lead to the decline of the state and the intervention of NGOs - Relief and Humanitarian activities

Coffee Break Fifteen Minutes

Discussion: Land Use, Water and Non-Renewable Resources Ostrom, Crafting Institutions Sarah Tylka Ali Ashraf Picard, Various Chunrong Chen Anh Ninh Stefanie Schell

Discussion: Land Use, Water and Non-Renewable Resources, Two Mawhood, Laura Meixell Verona Benjamin Wunsch and Olowu and Cheema and Rondinelli Ida Bormentar Lindsay Wood Verona Benjamin

The Problem Planning for Local Government and Rural Development

Human Resource Development L. Picard- Botswana Study

Table 1: Education and Training Needs of Unified Local Government Service – Summary by Position Classification of Those in Post, February, 1981 * Vacancies include expatriates in position

Table 2: Sample Table of Cadre Manpower and Training Positions* * Footnotes to be provided for explanation of assumptions

Table 3: Summary of Manpower and Training Needs, 1982 – 1992, by ‘A’ and ‘B’ Posts

Table 4a: Proposed Training Programme:Treasury/Revenue Cadre

Table 4b: Proposed Training Programme:Treasury/Revenue Cadre, cont.

Table 5: Sample of a Cadre Training Scheme

Table 6: Summary, Student/Week to be Trained Summary of Student Weeks to be Trained for all Institutions, 1982 – 1986

Discussion: Cumulative Issues land use, water, basic Needs NGOs, grassroots institutions and civil society in Africa, Latin America, Eastern Europe, Asia and the Middle East. Implications on Local Government, Civil Society and Governance Human Resource Skills and Rural Change Democracy

End of Session Discussion Group Discussion: Four Minute Presentation on Governance in each Region Africa South Asia/Southeast Asia Latin America/Caribbean South Asia

Regional Patterns: Governance (Readings) Break into Groups for Fifteen Minutes Identify the (reading) source for your presentation

Regional Patterns: The Institutional Legacy (Readings) Southeast (and South) Asia Lindsay Martin Wood Chunrong Chen

Regional Patterns: The Institutional Legacy (Readings) South Asia Ali Ashraf Laura Meixell Stephanie Schell

Regional Patterns: The Institutional Legacy (Readings) Central America and the Caribbean Verona Benjamin Anh Ninh

Regional Patterns: The Institutional Legacy (Readings) Africa Ida Bomentar Sarah Tylka

Summary Discussion What if anything have we learned about Governance, Local Government and Civil Society So Far?