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The political ecology of peasant sugarcane farming in northern Belize.

机译:伯利兹北部农民种植甘蔗的政治生态。

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摘要

The Belizean export sugar industry is dominated by small family farmers who produce the nation's most important cash crop in terms of area under cultivation, employment, and export earnings. These peasant farmers control both cane cultivation and the harvest transport system and receive the lion' s share of the proceeds from the sale of Belizean sugar. The origins of this anomalous industry can be traced to the regions' long history of peasant resistance to exploitation.; Sugarcane was brought to Belize by refugees of the Mayan Caste Wars in the mid-nineteenth century who began producing sugar for the local market using swidden technology. Sugar production was briefly taken over by British plantations; however, the peasants were never fully proletarianized despite attempts to turn them into a plantation labor force.; The peasantry's historical resistance to proletarianization is the result of several factors. Colonial officials and capitalists found it difficult to control either the movements or the labor of these independent cultivators. Low rural population density, peasants' refusal to give up subsistence farming, sugarcane's compatibility with swidden farming practices, and the peasantry's politicization all contributed to the dominance of small-farmer cane production during this century.; During the 1950s plantation production was resurrected in order to meet the colony's recently acquired Commonwealth Sugar Agreement export quota. Colonial planners assumed that plantations were more efficient and competitive than peasant farmers. Nevertheless, in 1972 the state sponsored plantations were forced to shut down due to competition from independent small cane farmers.; Peasant sugarcane farming has proven to be remarkably resilient in the face of crises spawned by chronic fluctuations in the price and demand for cane sugar. Most farmers depend heavily on family labor to minimize their production costs. Because they have minimal capital inputs to production, they can sustain negative profits from cane and still survive by deploying family labor into other income and/or subsistence producing activities. The viability of peasant farming families that allows them to compete successfully with large-scale capitalist sugarcane farmers contradicts the Marxian notion of the inevitability of polarization into capitalist farmers and proletarian workers.
机译:伯利兹的制糖业主要由家庭小农组成,他们在耕种面积,就业和出口收入方面都是该国最重要的经济作物。这些农民控制着甘蔗种植和收割运输系统,并从出售伯利兹糖中获得了收益的绝大部分。这种异常产业的起源可以追溯到该地区农民抵抗剥削的悠久历史。十九世纪中叶玛雅种姓战争的难民将甘蔗带到伯利兹,他们开始使用普及的技术为当地市场生产糖。糖的生产由英国的种植园短暂地接管。但是,尽管试图将农民转变为种植园劳动力,他们却从未得到完全的无产阶级化。农民对无产阶级化的历史抵抗是多种因素的结果。殖民地官员和资本家发现很难控制这些独立耕种者的运动或劳动。农村人口密度低,农民拒绝放弃自给自足的农业,甘蔗与轮耕作法的相容性以及农民的政治化,都促使本世纪小规模甘蔗生产占主导地位。在1950年代,为了满足殖民地最近获得的《英联邦制糖协议》的出口配额,复活了人工林。殖民地规划者认为,种植园比农民更有效和更具竞争力。然而,由于独立的小甘蔗种植者的竞争,1972年国家赞助的种植园被迫关闭。事实证明,面对蔗糖价格和需求的长期波动引发的危机,农民的甘蔗种植具有显着的韧性。大多数农民严重依赖家庭劳动,以最大限度地降低生产成本。由于他们的生产资本投入最少,因此他们可以维持甘蔗的负利润,并且仍然可以通过将家庭劳动力分配到其他收入和/或维持生计的生产活动中来生存。农民家庭的生存能力使他们能够成功地与大规模的资本主义甘蔗农民竞争,这与马克思主义关于两极分化不可避免地进入资本主义农民和无产阶级工人的观念相矛盾。

著录项

  • 作者

    Higgins, John Erwin.;

  • 作者单位

    The University of Arizona.;

  • 授予单位 The University of Arizona.;
  • 学科 Anthropology Cultural.; Economics Agricultural.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 1998
  • 页码 368 p.
  • 总页数 368
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 人类学;农业经济;
  • 关键词

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