’Peasant question’; central to study of rural development
As agrarian systems the world over undergo massive change, the role of the smallholder within wider economic and political relations remains a key focus for academic study and policy debate.
Since the days of Lenin and Chayanov, ‘the peasant question’ has been central to the study of rural development. But today, there is not just one question, but many. The analytical and theoretical perspectives required to make sense of dramatic changes in rural settings due to globalisation, financial crises, land grabs and radical economic change have also shifted. No longer is there a standard Marxist critique, but a range of other perspectives, drawing on a more plural set of insights, knowledges and conceptual frames.
But the basic questions at the heart of this long tradition in studies of rural development remain important. For any setting, we must ask who owns what, who gets what and what do they do with it? Social relations – notably class and gender - and politics – both of the state and wider social movements - inevitably govern the distribution of assets, patterns of work and divisions of labour, the distribution of income and the dynamics of consumption and accumulation in rural societies.
Leading Journal on Peasant Studies Re-launched
The Journal of Peasant Studies [1] was established in 1973 to explore these questions, and for over nearly four decades has provided a focus for debate. Over this period, it has become one of the leading journals in the field of rural development, aiming to provoke and promote multidisciplinary, critical thinking about social structures, institutions, actors and processes of change in and in relation to the rural world.
This year the Journal has been re-launched. A new editor and editorial team have been appointed and the journal’s orientation and editorial policy have been revised.
The new editor, Jun Borras – Professor at St Mary’s University, Canada, is actively involved in rural social movements internationally and has contributed substantially to scholarship on land reform and agrarian change, particularly in the context of the Philippines. He is supported by an Editorial Collective [2], which includes IDS Fellow, Ian Scoones.
Highlighting contemporary controversies and policy issues in rural development
The opening editorial of the new issue states that the journal will: ‘…encourage further inquiry into how agrarian power relations between classes and other social groups are created, understood, contested and transformed. The journal will pay special attention to questions of agency of marginalised groups in agrarian societies, particularly their autonomy and capacity to interpret – and change – their conditions. It will promote contributions that question mainstream prescriptions or interrogate orthodoxies in radical thinking. We encourage contributions about a wide range of contemporary and historical questions and perspectives related to rural politics and development.’
The latest issue is now available free to download [3] and includes an array of articles defining a new focus for the study of rural politics and development. The opening article by Jun Borras sets the scene, locating contemporary debates about peasant societies in context. An article by Ian Scoones reviews rural livelihoods perspectives, and particularly the past decade’s experience of using ‘sustainable livelihoods’ approaches. Shahra Razavi explores the gendered dimensions of agrarian change, while Marc Edelman looks at the interactions between social movements and professional researchers. A series of articles also reflect on the longer-term history of ‘peasant studies’, including Teodor Shanin on Chayanov, Henry Bernstein on Lenin and Chayanov and Terence Byres on the comparative historical experiences of agrarian transition in Britain, France and Prussia.
In a forthcoming issue, a new ‘Grassroots Voices’ section presents a collection of reflections on ’Everyday Forms of Political Expression’ from a range of social movement activists, while a future book reviews section will contain a review essay on critical responses to the World Bank’s World Development Report on agriculture by IDS Fellow Stephen Devereux and colleagues.
The revamped journal aims to become the focus for debate and discussion about rural politics and development, and seeks to generate informed debate, comment and analysis – particularly encouraging contributions from younger scholars from the global south.
The Journal aims to highlight contemporary controversies and policy issues, and explore them through a lens focused on agrarian politics and change. For example, a forthcoming conference, convened by the Journal, focuses on biofuels, land and agrarian change [4] and will examine how the transfer of land to use by biofuels has affected livelihoods, tenure security and agrarian relations, and the political economy of policies underlying such rural transformation. Future journal issues will include special sections of food sovereignty, agro-ecology movements and human rights and agrarian struggles.
Journal of Peasant Studies
Free Special issue - Critical perspectives in agrarian change and peasant studies
ISSN: 1743-9361 (electronic) 0306-6150 (paper)
Publication Frequency: 4 issues per year
Subjects: Development - Soc Sci; Development Studies; Economics and Development; Ethnicity; Rural Development;
Publisher: Routledge
Editorial Board
Editor
Saturnino (’Jun’) Borras Jr - Saint Mary’s University, Canada
Editorial Collective
Amita Baviskar- Delhi University, India
Marc Edelman - City University of New York, USA
Jonathan Fox - University of California, Santa Cruz, USA
Deniz Kandiyoti - School of Oriental & African Studies, UK
Nancy Peluso - University of California, Berkeley, USA
Shahra Razavi - UN Research Institute for Social Development, Switzerland
Ian Scoones - IDS, University of Sussex, UK
Wendy Wolford - University of North Carolina, USA
Reviews Section Editors
Elizabeth Fitting - Dalhousie University, Canada
Ruth Hall - University of the Western Cape & St Antony’s College, Oxford University
Ryan Isakson - Saint Mary’s University, Canada
International Advisory Board - Read the IAB members biography’s
Shapan Adnan - National University of Singapore, Singapore; A. Haroon Akram Lodhi - Trent University, Canada; Willem Assies - The Netherlands; Habib Ayeb - University of Paris VIII, France & American University, Egypt; Anthony Bebbington - University of Manchester, UK; James K Boyce - University of Massachusetts, USA; Jefferson Boyer - Appalachian State University, USA; Annette Desmarais - University of Regina, Canada; Jeffrey Gould - Indiana University, USA; John Harriss - Simon Fraser University, Canada; Susanna Hecht - University of California, Los Angeles, USA; Peter Ho - Groningen University, The Netherlands; Eric Holt-Gimenez - Food First/Institute for Food and Development, USA; Kees Jansen - Wageningen University, The Netherlands; Cristobal Kay- Institute of Social Studies, The Netherlands;Benedict Kerkvliet- Australian National University, Australia; Sharachchandra Lele- Institute for Social & Economic Change, India; Xochitl Leyva Solano- CIESAS, Chiapas, Mexico; Magdalena Leon - (retired) National University of Colombia, USA; Lianjiang Li - Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong; Tania Li- University of Toronto, Canada; David Ludden - New York University, USA; Christian Lund- Roskilde University, Denmark; Bernardo Mancano Fernandes - Universidade Estadual Paulista, Brazil; Marjorie Mbilinyi - (retired) University of Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania & Tanzania Gender Networking Programme, Tanzania; Philip McMichael - Cornell University, USA; Leonilde Servolo de Medeiros - Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Peter Newell - University of East Anglia, UK; Gerardo Otero - Simon Fraser University, Canada & University of Zacatecas, Mexico; Amalia Pallares- University of Illinois, USA; James Putzel- London School of Economics, UK; Jesse Ribot - University of Illinois, USA; Jonathan Rigg - Durham University, UK; Rosanne Rutten - University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Reem Saad - American University in Cairo, Egypt; Esha Shah - IDS, University of Sussex, UK; Issa Shivji - University of Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania; Thomas Sikor - University of East Anglia, UK; Kalyanakrishnan Sivaramakrishnan - Yale University, USA; Max Spoor - Institute of Social Studies, The Netherlands; Lynn Stephen - University of Oregon, USA; Dzodzi Tsikata - University of Ghana, Ghana; Peter Vandergeest - York University, Canada; A.R. Vasavi - National Institute of Advanced Studies, India; Henry Veltmeyer - Saint Mary’s University, Canada; Emily Yeh - University of Colorado, USA; Cherryl Walker - Stellenbosch University, South Africa; Ann Whitehead - University of Sussex, UK; Marc Wuyts - Institute of Social Studies, The Nethelands
Journal of Peasant Studies, Vol. 36, Issue No. 1
Special Issue: Critical Perspectives in Agrarian Change and Peasant Studies
Edited by Saturnino M. Borras Jr.
FREE TO DOWNLOAD!
http://www.informaworld.com/jps
About the Collection
Agrarian transformations within and across countries have been significantly and dynamically altered during the past few decades compared to previous eras, provoking a variety of reactions from rural poor communities worldwide. The recent convergence of various crises – financial, food, energy and environmental – has put the nexus between ‘rural development’ and ‘development in general’ back onto the center stage of theoretical, policy and political agendas in the world today. Confronting these issues will require (re)engaging with critical theories, taking politics seriously, and utilizing rigorous and appropriate research methodologies. These are the common messages and implications of the various contributions to this collection in the context of a scholarship that is critical in two senses: questioning prescriptions from mainstream perspectives and interrogating popular conventions in radical thinking. This JPS special issue is a
collection of articles in ‘state of the art’ format on key perspectives, frameworks and methodologies in agrarian change and peasant studies.
Table of Contents
1. Agrarian Change and Peasant Studies: Changes, Continuities and Challenges – an Introduction Saturnino M. Borras Jr. 2. The Landlord Class, Peasant Differentiation, Class Struggle and the Transition to Capitalism: England, France and Prussia Compared Terence J. Byres 3. V. I. Lenin and A. V. Chayanov: Looking Back, Looking Forward Henry Bernstein 4. Chayanov’s Treble Death and Tenuous Resurrection Teodor Shanin 5. Development Strategies and Rural Development: Exploring Synergies, Eradicating Poverty Cristóbal Kay 6. A Food Regime Genealogy Philip McMichael 7. Livelihoods Perspectives and Rural Development Ian Scoones 8. Engendering the Political Economy of Agrarian Change Shahra Razavi 9. Everyday Politics in Peasant Societies (and Ours) Benedict Kerkvliet 10. Synergies and Tensions between Rural Social Movements and Professional Researchers Marc Edelman
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