scispace - formally typeset
Open Access

Survey Article Rural Poverty and Development Strategies in Latin America

TLDR
In this paper, the authors examined the marginality, social exclusion, new rurality and rural livelihoods, as well as the ethnic and gender dimensions of poverty, and argued that the starting point for the eradication of poverty has to be the implementation of a development strategy that addresses such inequalities while at the same time achieving competitiveness within the global system.
Abstract
Several approaches to the study of poverty are discussed, to learn from their strengths as well as their weaknesses. For this purpose the concepts of marginality, social exclusion, new rurality and rural livelihoods, as well as the ethnic and gender dimensions of poverty, are examined. The debate on the peasantization (capitalization) or proletarianization (pauperization) of the peasantry sets the scene for the analysis of the different strategies adopted by peasants and rural labourers to secure their survival and perhaps achieve some prosperity. In examining the success or failure of interventions by governments, civil society and international organizations in the reduction of poverty, it is claimed that the State has a key role to perform. Furthermore, it is argued that poverty is caused and reproduced by the unequal distribution of resources and power at the household, local, national and international levels. Therefore, the starting point for the eradication of poverty has to be the implementation of a development strategy that addresses such inequalities while at the same time achieving competitiveness within the global system.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Land grabbing in Latin America and the Caribbean

TL;DR: Land grabbing has gained momentum in Latin America and the Caribbean during the past decade The phenomenon has taken different forms and character as compared to processes that occur in other regions of the world, especially Africa as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Peasants Make Their Own History, But Not Just as They Please . . .

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors employ contemporary peasant mobilizing discourses and practices to evaluate the terms in which we understand agrarian movements today, through an exercise of historical specification, and they consider why the terms of the original Agrarian question no longer apply to agrarians change today, and why the shift in the terms corresponds to the movement from the late-nineteenth century and twentieth century, when states were the organizing principle of political economy, to the twenty-first century, where capital has become the organising principle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Agrarian change and peasant studies: changes, continuities and challenges – an introduction

TL;DR: In this paper, a collection of essays on key perspectives, frameworks and methodologies for agrarian transformation and development is presented, with a focus on the nature, scope, pace and direction of agrarians' transformations and development.
Journal ArticleDOI

La Vía Campesina and its Global Campaign for Agrarian Reform

TL;DR: The Global Campaign for Agrarian Reform (GCAR) as discussed by the authors has made a significant impact (inter)nationally in reshaping the terms of the land reform debates, but its impact on other land policy dynamics has been marginal.
Journal ArticleDOI

The political ecology of Jatropha plantations for biodiesel in Tamil Nadu, India

TL;DR: The authors deconstruct the shaky premises of the dominant discourse of Jatropha as a pro-poor and pro-wasteland development crop, a discourse that paints a win-win picture between poverty alleviation, natural resource regeneration, and energy security goals.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Rural Society, the State and Social Capital in Eastern India: A Critical Investigation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the extent of trust and cooperation between state representatives and the rural poor in two villages in Orissa, Eastern India, and found that the conditions for state-society synergy are undermined.
Posted ContentDOI

The Plundering of Agriculture in Developing Countries

TL;DR: In this article, the impact of direct and indirect price policy interventions on agricultural production, consumption, foreign exchange earnings, the budget, income transfers between agriculture and the rest of the economy, and income distribution is investigated.