Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAdelia Beasley Modified over 8 years ago
1
Eric Vanhaute Ghent University ECNU, July 4th 2011 1 Trajectories of Peasant Transformation. The incorporation and transformation of rural zones
2
Questions 1/ Where is the peasant? 2/ What is a peasant? 3/ Old (local) versus new (global) peasantries? 4/ Trajectories of peasant transformation 5/ A new agrarian question: de- peazantization as the global way to modernity? 2
3
1/ Where is the peasant? 3
4
Rural population (% total population) TotalWorldAfricaAsiaM-SoNorthEuro TotalWorldAfricaAsiaM-SoNorthEuro (billion) %(billion) AmAm (billion) %(billion) AmAm 1950 2,51 71%(1,79) 85%83%58%36%49% 1970 3,70 64%(2,37) 77%77%43%26%37% 1990 5,28 57%(3,01) 68%68%29%25%29% 2000 6,09 53%(3,24) 63%63%25%21%27% 2010 6,84 49%(3,37) 58%57%21%18%26% 2030 8,20 39%(3,21) 47%46%15%13%21% 4
5
Agricultural population (% total economically active population) 1980-2020 5
6
World agricultural labour force WorldHigh incomeLow income 196020001960200019602000 Ag. Labour force60%44%19%3%78%59% Ag. Labour intensity0.150.040.921.42 (ag labourers/ha) 6
7
7
8
A 21th century urban world ? Equals de-agrarianization? De- ruralization? De-peasantization? -- more convergence? -- more proletarianization? 8
9
9
10
10
11
2/ What is a peasant ? - In search for a definition - In search for a methodology In search for a definition - Peasants as a social group - Peasantries as a social process - Processes of ‘peasantization’ (de- and re-) 11
12
Peasants are rural, agricultural producers who control the land they work either as tenants or as smallholders - who are organised largely in households and in village communities, that meet most of their subsistence needs (production, exchange, credit), - who pool different forms of income and - who are ruled by other social groups who extract a surplus either directly via rents, via (non balanced) markets, or through control of state power (taxation) Key words are (some degree of) autonomy, income-pooling, household based village structures and surplus extraction outside local control 12
13
- Redefinition / Recreation - Struggles: -Acces to land -Access to household labour -Access to commons -Access to knowledge Old and modern enclosures 13
14
Understanding peasantries in global history In search for a methodology - The global dimension? - Rural zones and frontiers Combining a comparative analysis with a (world-) systemic perspective: multiple scales of time / place / unit of analysis 14
15
3/ Old and new peasantries? The redefinition of ‘peasant spaces’ The reduction of ‘peasant spaces’ by - Recreation/redistribution/appropriation of wealth - Redefining livability of local systems of protection/support/credit - Internalization of social and ecological costs - The enclosure of ‘commons’ An increasing vulnerability 15
16
The redefinition of ‘peasant spaces’ - 16 th century: peasant zones around capitalist centers around North Sea - 19 th century: forced (re-) peasantization in European colonies - 21th century: (re-) peasantization as anti- systemic force ? 16
17
Contextualizing ‘the European way’: de-peasantization - Success: economic growth, social welfare - From informal to formal protection systems - From local/regional to national/global scale - Externalizing social en ecological costs (green revolution!) 17
18
4/ Our research project: trajectories of peasant transformation Different roads of transformation of peasant societies: 1500-2000 - North-Western Europe (North Sea Area) - China (Yangzi River Delta) - Latin-America (Central Andes) - (Central Africa) 18
19
Focus: Zones and frontiers - Frontiers as zones of sustained contact between different social systems - External / horizontal frontiers Internal / vertical frontiers - Peasant zones as (peripheral) spaces of exploitation and recreation 19
20
Social and spatial differentiation - Uneven incorporation and uneven commodification - processes of de- and re- peasantization are also the outcome of changing strategies of peasant livelihood diversification - decrease of the margins of survival 20
21
Central field of struggle: Rights of Access and Rights of Property - Property - Access - Rights To means of production: labour, capital goods, land and natural resources, knowledge
22
Debates - Institutional economics - Social power relations (competition over peasant surplus) - Social distribution of property - Frontiers of commodification - ‘new peasantries’
23
Actors (who has rights / who defines rights) - Peasant (families) - Village institutions - Lords - Markets - States (government) - Social movements
24
Trajectories of change - Defining rights / redistribution of rights - Types of labour /surplus accumulation - Types of peasant organisation / resistence - Systemic changes in the capitalist world-system
25
5/ The European way = The global way? de-peasantization ? - Success: economic growth, social welfare - From informal to formal protection systems - From local/regional to national/global scale - Externalizing social en ecological costs (green revolution!) 25
26
Europe’s Message Theory of progress: modernization - Industrialization / de-peasantization - Economic integration / free trade - Promise of individual wealth and collective protection Processes of the core – examples for the periphery? 26
27
Limits of the European message? From food security to food sovereignty? A new ruralization? ‘peasants of the world’ - New forms of sustainability - Framework of organisation, mobilisation, discours, identity - New local and global movements? 27
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.