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Journal articles on the topic 'Peasants Philippines'

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1

Franco, Jennifer C., and Patricio N. Abinales. "Again, They're Killing Peasants in the Philippines." Critical Asian Studies 39, no. 2 (June 2007): 315–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14672710701339501.

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2

Hayami, Y., M. Kikuchi, and E. B. Marciano. "Middlemen and peasants in rice marketing in the Philippines." Agricultural Economics 20, no. 2 (March 1999): 79–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1574-0862.1999.tb00555.x.

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3

Hayami, Y. "Middlemen and peasants in rice marketing in the Philippines." Agricultural Economics 20, no. 2 (March 1, 1999): 79–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0169-5150(98)00082-6.

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4

Portera, Eric F., and Antonio C. Hila. "Liberating Farmers from Tenancy Bondage: The Land and Agrarian Reform Programs of Ramon Magsaysay (1954-1957)." Philippine Social Science Journal 3, no. 1 (June 22, 2020): 142–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.52006/main.v3i1.118.

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The past economic colonial policies in the Philippines created severe issues for land tenancy and distribution patterns. When Magsaysay won the presidency in 1953, his administration carried the banner of land and agrarian reform as its core policy. The paper investigated how Magsaysay Administration’s agrarian reform policies addressed the needs of the peasants. Further, the study presents the land and agrarian reform programs enacted by the Magsaysay Administration, from conceptualization to implementation, their results, and efficacy in easing the tenancy problem of farmers. Using the historical method, the study showed that Magsaysay's land and agrarian reform program provided security of tenure to the farmers. It enabled them to become more independent, self-reliant, and responsible citizens. Ultimately, the program succeeded in protecting the farmers from the uncertainty and threat of land deprivation and, in effect, curtailed insurgency. Magsaysay's program also proved influential to succeeding administrations in the design and construction of their land and agrarian reform laws.
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5

Lawless, Robert, Violeta Lopez-Gonzaga, and Jesucita L. Sodusta. "Peasants in the Hills. A Study of the Dynamics of Social Change Among the Buhid Swidden Cultivators in the Philippines." Pacific Affairs 58, no. 2 (1985): 366. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2758313.

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6

Ludovice, Nicolo Paolo P. "The Carabao and the Encounter of the Law in Nineteenth-Century Philippines." Society & Animals 27, no. 3 (June 13, 2019): 307–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685306-12341557.

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AbstractThe place of the non-human animal in the legal world has been questioned. Animals’ legal status as property has been probed on how to best protect their welfare. While this is significant for animals who are not on the farm, it might not be effective when considering animals raised for food. The case of the carabao, or the water buffalo, in the Philippines is seen as a hybrid. This article traces the development of the carabao in Philippine history during the nineteenth century. Through historical, archival, and legal research on animals, the carabao is situated as private property. Colonial instruments of control were introduced to protect the carabao from criminals. In its proper historical context, the classification of carabaos as property indeed highlighted the animal’s status as legally owned, which did not necessarily demean the animal’s relationship with the human peasant nor the carabao’s quality as an animal.
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7

Lindio-Mcgovern, Ligaya. "The Philippines: counter-insurgency and peasant women." Race & Class 34, no. 4 (April 1993): 1–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030639689303400401.

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8

Tsuji, Takashi. "The Conventional and Modern Uses of Water Buffalo Milk in the Philippines." Southeastern Philippines Journal of Research and Development 26, no. 2 (September 30, 2021): 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.53899/spjrd.v26i2.152.

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In Southeast Asia, milking of livestock is not common. In the Philippines, water buffalo (carabao) milk has been used since the Spanish colonial period of the 16th century. Milk is processed into cheese (kesong puti) or candy (pastillas). These customs are found in a few areas on the Islands of Luzon and Visayas. However, in 1996, following the launch of the Philippine Carabao Center (PCC), the uses of modern milk have been practiced nationwide using Murrah (buffalo), which produces more milk than a carabao. This paper analyzes the dairy transition currently occurring in the Philippines from the conventional uses of carabao milk to the modern uses of Murrah milk. Intensive fieldwork was broadly conducted in conventional and modern milk use areas of the country, with water buffalo management and milk use systems researched using participatory observation and interview methods. This study delves into how the conventional uses of water buffalo milk have helped support the livelihood of special farmers and whether recent government-backed projects, such as enhancing the ability of water buffaloes to produce milk, have made carabaos dispensable. The shift to modern milk uses, which relies on buffalo milk, has become a national project, in order to improve the subsistence of peasant farmers. This paper concludes that the modern dairy farming of Murrah is becoming popular in farming societies close to the PCC and that the dairy culture has changed from being a minor conventional regional system to a major industrial farming and business system to sustain the lives of local small-scale farmers.
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9

Hidayatullah, Putra. "COLONIALISM AND PEASANT RESISTANCE IN SOUTHEAST ASIA." Indonesian Journal of Islamic History and Culture 3, no. 1 (May 31, 2022): 132–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.22373/ijihc.v3i1.1668.

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Colonialism in Southeast Asia was marked by the response of local communities, especially farmers, in various forms of protest. The protests were rooted in problems with the economic system. The colonial rulers brought a different economic logic with a new mode of production for traditional farmers. In response to these protests, the colonial government was assisted by the presence of local elites. This article will describe peasant resistance in Indonesia, Vietnam and the Philippines with the argument that although local elites were involved, they had different ways of dealing with resistance. In addition to the problems of the economic system, colonialism also brought modernity which had an impact on the disintegration of the social system.
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10

Mergos, George J. "The Economic Contribution of Children in Peasant Agriculture and the Effect of Education: Evidence from the Philippines." Pakistan Development Review 31, no. 2 (June 1, 1992): 189–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.30541/v31i2pp.189-201.

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Issues of consumption-leisure choice and of the effect of education are at the centte of the debate on labour supply and on the economic value of children in peasant agriculture. This paper provides empirical evidence on how education affects child labour supply in an extended commodity demand-labour supply framework, using farmhousehold survey data from the Philippines. The empirical results of this paper point out that adult and child labour respond normally to changes in wages, that a complementarity exists between adult and child labour in farm operations, that children have a positive economic conttibution to farm households in peasant agriculture, and that education may have a limited impact in reducing fertility in rural households.
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11

Hawes, Gary. "Theories of Peasant Revolution: A Critique and Contribution from the Philippines." World Politics 42, no. 2 (January 1990): 261–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2010466.

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This article examines three models—moral economy, rational choice, and class structure—that have been applied to rebellions and revolutionary movements in Southeast Asia. All three are found lacking in various ways and unable to provide convincing explanations for the growth and continuing strength of the contemporary revolutionary movement in the Philippines. The Aquino government is challenged by a movement that has a mass base of roughly ten million and fields a fighting force of twenty thousand to twenty-five thousand men and women. It is active in virtually every province and city of the nation. Based on the present case study, suggestions are made both for ways in which the insights of extant theories can be synthesized and ways in which these theories must be revised if they are to be made more generally applicable to today's revolutions.
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12

Lara, Francisco, and Horacio R. Morales. "The peasant movement and the challenge of rural democratisation in the Philippines." Journal of Development Studies 26, no. 4 (July 1990): 143–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00220389008422177.

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13

Wallace, Ben J. "Mindoro Highlanders: The Life of the Swidden Agriculturalist. By Yasushi Kikuchi. Quezon City: New Day Publishers, 1984. xviii, 110 pp. Plate, Appendixes, Bibliography, Index, Map, Figures. $10. (Distributed in North America by The Cellar Book Shop, 18090 Wyoming, Detroit, Michigan.) - Peasants in the Hills: A Study of the Dynamics of Social Change Among the Buhid Swidden Cultivators in the Philippines. By Violeta Lopez-Gonzaga. Diliman, Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press, 1983. xiv, 226 pp. Maps, Figures, Tables, Appendixes, Glossary, Bibliography, Index. N.p. (Distributed outside the Philippines by the University of Hawaii Press.)." Journal of Asian Studies 45, no. 1 (November 1985): 194–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2056882.

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14

Aguilar, Filomeno V. "The Philippine peasant as capitalist: Beyond the categories of ideal‐typical capitalism." Journal of Peasant Studies 17, no. 1 (October 1989): 41–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03066158908438412.

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15

Curry, Mark Stevenson. "Civil Society Fragmentation and Agrarian Reform: Focus on CARPER in the Philippines." International Studies Review 14, no. 1 (October 15, 2013): 57–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/2667078x-01401003.

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Civil society fragmentation may have significant implications for rural development initiatives, such as agrarian reform program implementation. This paper assesses the issue by looking at civil society participation and cleavages in the enactment of the 2009 Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program Extension with Reforms (CARPER) in the Philippines. CARPER was promoted by a coalition of social and political movements, including the Catholic Church and peasant and farmer groups aligned with centre-left political organizations. It was however opposed by two discordant groups: the leftist national democratic bloc of people’s organizations and legislators, and conservative landlords. A Gramscian framework is adapted to describe the hegemonic relations affecting three engaged organizations from the civil society spectrum and to assess potential convergences among them.
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16

Putzel, James. "Managing the ‘main force’: The communist party and the peasantry in the Philippines." Journal of Peasant Studies 22, no. 4 (July 1995): 645–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03066159508438591.

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17

Ocay, Jeffry. "The Peasant Movement and Great Refusal in the Philippines: Situating Critical Theory at the Margins." Kritike: An Online Journal of Philosophy 12, no. 3 (April 1, 2019): 43–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.25138/12.3a3.

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18

Scalice, Joseph. "Pamitinan and Tapusi: Using the Carpio legend to reconstruct lower-class consciousness in the late Spanish Philippines." Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 49, no. 2 (June 2018): 250–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022463418000218.

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Reynaldo Ileto, in his classicPasyon and Revolution, sought the categories of perception of the Filipino ‘masses’ that guided their participation in the Philippine Revolution. Among the sources he examined was the Carpio legend, which he unfortunately subsumed to the separate, elite Carpioawit(Tagalog poem). Through a detailed examination of the legend's historical and geographical context, with its invocation of two locations, Pamitinan and Tapusi, I arrive at a different understanding of lower-class consciousness than Ileto. Rather than a counter-rational expression of peasant millenarianism, the legend of Bernardo Carpio was a ‘hidden transcript’ celebrating the history of social banditry in the region.
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19

Carlson, Keith Thor. "Born Again of the People: Luis Taruc and Peasant Ideology in Philippine Revolutionary Politics." Histoire sociale/Social history 41, no. 82 (2008): 417–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/his.0.0049.

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20

Nadeau, Kathy. "Peasant Resistance and Religious Protests in Early Philippine Society: Turning Friars Against the Grain." Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 41, no. 1 (March 2002): 75–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-5906.00101.

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21

Tadem, Eduardo Climaco. "Technocracy and the Peasantry: Martial Law Development Paradigms and Philippine Agrarian Reform." Journal of Contemporary Asia 45, no. 3 (December 6, 2014): 394–418. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00472336.2014.983538.

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22

Hapal, Karl, Hannah Gante, Yanna Ibarra, and Patricia Rombaon. "Protecting land activists from state violence: the case of NFSW and KMP in Negros, the Philippines." Journal of the British Academy 10s3 (2022): 57–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/jba/010s3.057.

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This article examines the concept of protection beyond the conventional human rights state-centric perspective. The article accounts for protective practices, strategies, and tactics that activists use to keep themselves and their livelihoods safe as they are engaged in rights promotion. The article draws on the case of the National Federation of Sugar Workers (NFSW) and Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (KMP, translation: Peasant Movement of the Philippines), both of which have endured persistent attacks by the state as they fight for land reform. In examining the case of NFSW and KMP, this article explores how protective practices comprise both short-term tactics and long-term strategies; pursued with, independent of, or in opposition to the state; and, deployed on local, national, and global stages together with and through allies and supportive actors networks.
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23

Wiber, Melanie G. "Dynamics of the Peasant Household Economy: Labor Recruitment and Allocation in an Upland Philippine Community." Journal of Anthropological Research 41, no. 4 (December 1985): 427–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/jar.41.4.3630573.

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24

Edy, Yosua Jaya, Sunyoto Usman, and Moh Najib Azca. "JEJARING ILLEGAL FISHING DI PERBATASAN INDONESIA-FILIPINA." Jurnal Asia Pacific Studies 1, no. 1 (November 24, 2017): 106. http://dx.doi.org/10.33541/japs.v1i1.504.

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Illegal fishing, known as IUU (illegal, unreported, unregulated) fisheries has long been happening throughout the territorial waters of the Republic of Indonesia. Talaud waters as border regions of Indonesia-Philippines also have the same problem. This study uses a network analysis approach with intensive field research for three years from 2014 to 2016, this research aims to determine the range of networks developed by actors involved in illegal fishing. The research found that illegal fishing activities in the area occurred at three levels, namely illegal fishing in communal networks, illegal fishing in associational networks and illegal fishing in industrial networks. The pattern of illegal fishing that occurs in communal networks is done by small fishermen (peasant fisher) with the characteristics of the use of traditional fishing gear, small scale, limited area and relatively subsistence. In an associational network the pattern of illegal fishing takes place on a wider scale, carried out by a post-peasant fisher with a more modern fishing gear, and involving local apparatus and officials. Meanwhile, illegal fishing in industrial networks is conducted by corporations involving high-ranking officials of policy-making countries at the central level, as well as by industry-scale entrepreneurs and fishermen. The strength of the illegal fishing network in the Indonesia-Philippines border region cannot be separated from the role of brokers or intermediaries that exist in every network. Brokers have an important role to connect actors involved in illegal fishing. One of the interesting findings of this research is that the role of brokers can also be carried out by state apparatus or parties related to the state apparatus. Keywords: illegal fishing, social network, broker, border area. Abstrak Illegal fishing atau yang dikenal dengan praktik perikanan IUU (illegal, unreported, unregulated) sudah lama terjadi di seluruh wilayah perairan Republik Indonesia. Perairan Talaud sebagai wilayah perbatasan Indonesia-Filipina juga memiliki persoalan yang sama. Penelitian ini menggunakan pendekatan analisis jaringan dengan riset lapangan secara intensif selama tiga tahun sejak 2014 hingga 2016, riset ini bertujuan untuk mengetahui ragam jejaring yang dikembangkan oleh aktor yang terlibat dalam illegal fishing. Riset ini menemukan, kegiatan illegal fishing yang terjadi di wilayah tersebut terjadi pada tiga level yaitu illegal fishing dalam jejaring komunal, illegal fishing dalam jejaring asosiasional dan illegal fishing dalam jejaring industrial. Pola illegal fishing yang terjadi dalam jejaring komunal dilakukan oleh nelayan kecil (peasant fisher) dengan ciri penggunaan alat tangkap tradisional, berskala kecil, area terbatas dan relatif bersifat subsisten. Dalam jejaring asosiasional pola illegal fishing terjadi dalam skala yang lebih luas, dilakukan oleh nelayan skala menengah (post-peasant fisher) dengan alat tangkap yang lebih modern, serta melibatkan aparat dan pejabat lokal. Sedangkan illegal fishing dalam jejaring industrial dilakukan oleh korporasi dengan melibatkan oknum pejabat tinggi negara pembuat kebijakan di tingkat pusat, serta dilakukan oleh pengusaha dan nelayan skala industri. Kuatnya jejaring illegal fishing di wilayah perbatasan Indonesia-Filipina ini tidak dapat dilepaskan dari peranan broker atau perantara yang ada di dalam setiap ragam jejaring. Broker memiliki peran penting menyambungkan aktor-aktor yang terlibat dalam illegal fishing. Salah satu temuan menarik riset ini adalah peranan broker dapat juga dilakukan oleh aparat negara atau pihak yang terkait dengan aparat negara. Kata kunci: illegal fishing, jaringan sosial, broker, wilayah perbatasan.
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Mina, Noula. "Taming and Training Greek “Peasant Girls” and the Gendered Politics of Whiteness in Postwar Canada: Canadian Bureaucrats and Immigrant Domestics, 1950s–1960s." Canadian Historical Review 102, s3 (September 1, 2021): s854—s875. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/chr-102-s3-014.

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Drawing on the voluminous government records as well as selective interviews in a large oral history archive created over several years, this article explores Canada’s recruitment of Greek female domestics in the 1950s and early 1960s within the context of the feminist scholarship on female labour schemes as well as more recent whiteness literature on the in-between racial status of peripheral Europeans. In considering the contradictory features of a large but little-known labour scheme through which more than ten thousand Greek women arrived, many of them before their families, it documents the role of the bureaucrats – who envisioned the domestics’ transformation into models of modern domesticity while portraying them as victims of their patriarchal communities and manipulators of Canadian immigration policy – and that of the women who negotiated various challenges. To account for the scheme’s remarkable longevity, a key argument probes the mix of factors that repositioned a traditionally non-preferred Southern European group of women into a desirable white source of immigrant labour and future Canadian motherhood. Ultimately, Greek women enjoyed a racial privilege and mobility not afforded to later arriving women from the Caribbean and Philippines.
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26

Cruikshank, Bruce. "Church Lands and Peasant Unrest in the Philippines: Agrarian Unrest in 20th Century Luzon. By Michael J. Connolly, S. J. Manila: Ateneo de Manila Press, 1992. vii, 232 pp." Journal of Asian Studies 55, no. 1 (February 1996): 211–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2943698.

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27

Griffin, Keith. "Toward an Alternative Land Reform Paradigm: A Philippine Perspective. By Yujiro Hayami, Ma. Agnes R. Quisumbing, and Lourdes S. Adriano. Manila: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1990. Pp. xiv, 209. - The Peasant Betrayed: Agriculture and Land Reform in the Third World. By John P. Powelson and Richard Stock. Washington, DC: The Cato Institute, 1990. Pp. xvi, 401. $20.00." Journal of Economic History 51, no. 3 (September 1991): 731–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022050700039802.

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28

KITLV, Redactie. "Book Reviews." Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde / Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia 150, no. 1 (1994): 214–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134379-90003104.

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- Peter Boomgaard, Nancy Lee Peluso, Rich Forests, Poor people; Resource control and resistance in Java. Berkeley, etc.: University of California Press, 1992, 321 pp. - N. A. Bootsma, H.W. Brands, Bound to empire; The United States and the Philippines. New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992, 356 pp. - Martin van Bruinessen, Jan Schmidt, Through the Legation Window, 1876-1926; Four essays on Dutch, Dutch-Indian and Ottoman history. Istanbul: Nederlands Historisch-Archaeologisch Instituut, 1992, 250 pp. - Freek Colombijn, Manuelle Franck, Quand la rizière recontre l ásphalte; Semis urbain et processus d úrbanisation à Java-est. Paris: École des hautes études en sciences sociales (Études insulindiennes: Archipel 10), 1993, 282 pp. Maps, tables, graphs, bibliography. - Kees Groeneboer, G.M.J.M. Koolen, Een seer bequaem middel; Onderwijs en Kerk onder de 17e eeuwse VOC. Kampen: Kok, 1993, xiii + 287 pp. - R. Hagesteijn, Janice Stargardt, The Ancient Pyu of Burma; Volume I: Early Pyu cities in a man-made landscape. Cambridge: PACSEA, Singapore: ISEAS, 1991. - Barbara Harrisson, Rolf B. Roth, Die ‘Heiligen Töpfe der Ngadju-Dayak (Zentral-Kalimantan, Indonesien); Eine Untersuchung über die rezeption von importkeramik bei einer altindonesischen Ethnie. Bonn (Mundus reihe ethnologie band 51), 1992, xv + 492 pp. - Ernst Heins, Raymond Firth, Tikopia songs; Poetic and musical art of a Polynesian people of the Solomon Islands. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (Cambridge studies in oral and literate culture no. 20), 1990, 307 pp., Mervyn McLean (eds.) - Ernst Heins, R. Anderson Sutton, Traditions of gamelan music in Java; Musical pluralism and regional identity.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (Cambridge studies in ethnomusicology), 1991, 291 pp., glossary, biblio- and discography, photographs, tables, music. - H.A.J. Klooster, Jaap Vogel, De opkomst van het indocentrische geschiedbeeld; Leven en werken van B.J.O. Schrieke en J.C. van Leur. Hilversum: Verloren, 1992, 288 pp. - Jane A. Kusin, Brigit Obrist van Eeuwijk, Small but strong; Cultural context of (mal)nutrition among the Northern Kwanga (East Sepik province, Papua New Guinea). Basel: Wepf & Co. AG Verlag, Basler Beiträge zur ethnologie, Band 34, 1992, 283 pp. - J. Thomas Lindblad, Pasuk Phongpaichit, The new wave of Japanese investment in ASEAN. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian studies, 1990, 127 pp. - Niels Mulder, Louis Gabaude, Une herméneutique bouddhique contemporaine de Thaïlande; Buddhadasa Bhikku. Paris: École Francaise d’Extrême-Orient, 1988, vii + 692 pp. - Marleen Nolten, Vinson H. Sutlive. Jr., Female and male in Borneo; Contributions and challenges to gender studies. Borneo research council Monograph series, volume 1, not dated but probably published in 1991. - Ton Otto, G.W. Trompf, Melanesian Religion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991, xi + 283 pp., including select bibliography and index. - IBM Dharma Palguna, Gordon D. Jensen, The Balinese people; A reinvestigation of character. Singapore-New York: Oxford University Press, 1992, 232 pp., Luh Ketut Suryani (eds.) - Anton Ploeg, Jürg Schmid, Söhne des Krokodils; Männerhausrituale und initiation in Yensan, Zentral-Iatmul, East Sepik province, Papua New Guinea. Basel: ethnologisches seminar der Universitat und Musuem für Völkerkunde (Basler Beiträge zur ethnologie, band 36), 1992, xii + 321 pp., Christine Kocher Schmid (eds.) - Raechelle Rubinstein, W. van der Molen, Javaans Schrift. (Semaian 8). Leiden: Vakgroep talen en culturen van Zuidoost-Azië en Oceanië, Rijksuniversiteit te Leiden, 1993. x + 129 pp. - Tine G. Ruiter, Arthur van Schaik, Colonial control and peasant resources in Java; Agricultural involution reconsidered. Amsterdam: Koninklijk Nederlands Aardrijkskundig Genootschap/Instituut voor Sociale geografie Universiteit van Amsterdam, 1986, 210 pp. - R. Schefold, Andrew Beatty, Society and exchange in Nias. Oxford: Clarendon press, (Oxford studies in social and cultural Anthropology), 1992, xiv + 322 pp., ill. - N.G. Schulte Nordholt, Ingo Wandelt, Der Weg zum Pancasila-Menschen (Die pancasila-Lehre unter dem P4-Beschlusz des Jahres 1978; Entwicklung und struktur der indonesischen staatslehre). Frankfurt am Main-Bern-New York-Paris: Peter Lang, Europäische Hochschulschriften, Reihe XXVII, Asiatische und Afrikaner Studien, 1989, 316 pp. - J.N.B. Tairas, Herman C. Kemp, Annotated bibliography of bibliographies on Indonesia. Leiden: KITLV press (Koninklijk Instituut voor taal-, land-en Volkenkunde, biographical series 17), 1990, xvii + 433 pp. - Brian Z. Tamanaha, Christopher Weeramantry, Nauru; Environmental damage under international trusteeship. Melbourne (etc.): Oxford University Press, 1992, xx+ 448 pp. - Wim F. Wertheim, Hersri Setiawan, Benedict R.O.’G. Anderson, Language and power; Exploring political cultures in Indonesia. Ithaca/London: Cornell University Press, 1930, 305 pp.
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29

Ravena, Kyle Philip. "20th Century Western Visayan Millenarian Representations: The Case of “Emperor” Flor Intrencherado in the Local Press, 1925-1929." Scientia - The International Journal on the Liberal Arts 10, no. 2 (September 30, 2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.57106/scientia.v10i2.137.

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From 1925-1929, the popular social movement of "Emperor" Flor Intrencherado in Western Visayas gained notoriety within the press local. The Iloilo-based local newspaper, the Makinaugalingon, extensively covered the movement in their press release articles. The newspaper, unsurprisingly, recreated a picture of Intrencherado and his followers in a language of ridicule, dismissing the movement and identifying its leader as a lunatic and insane despite the locality of the press. This, in turn, marginalized the movement, its goals, and objectives, as well as the leader, "Emperor" Flor Intrencherado. The goal of this study is to present, review, and analyze the different representations the local press created with the “infamous” peasant movement and give the context in which similar social movements could be understood. References Primary Materials El Tiempo. Microfilm. Information Services and Instruction Section, University of the Philippines Main Library. Quezon City. The issue used: August 8, 1907 Makinaugalingon. Microfilm. Information Services and Instruction Section, University of the Philippines Main Library. Quezon City. Various Issues used. Manila Times. Microfilm. Information Services and Instruction Section, University of the Philippines Main Library. Quezon City. Various Issues used. Philippines Free Press. Microfilm. Information Services and Instruction Section, University of the Philippines Main Library. Quezon City. Various Issues used. Works Cited Acevedo, Christian George. “Rosendo Mejica, the Golden Age of the Hiligaynon Literature and the Vernacularization of Jose Rizal’s Novels.” AGATHOS: An International Review of the Humanities and Social Sciences 11, no. 2 (2020): 107–18. Adamkiewicz, Andrei. “The Legitimating Aspects of Colonial Discourse.” In Culture and Texts: Representations of Philippine Society, edited by Raul Pertierra and Eduardo Ugarte, 155-176. Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press, 1994. Aguilar, Filomeno. Clash of Spirits: The History of Power and Sugar Planter Hegemony on a Visayan Island. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1998. Aguilar, Filomeno Jr. “Masonic Myths and Revolutionary Feats in Negros Occidental.” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 28, no. 2 (September 1997): 285–300. Alayon, John Richard. “The Empire of Flor Yntrencherado: A Study of Anti-Colonial Resistance.” Undergraduate Research, University of the Philippines in the Visayas, 1999. Bankoff, Greg. "Bandits, Banditry, and Landscapes of Crime in the Nineteenth-Century Philippines." Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 29, no. 2 (September 1998): 319–39. Baumgartner, Joseph. "Newspapers as Historical Sources." Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 9, no. 3 (September 1981): 256–58. Borrinaga, George Emmanuel. “Seven Churches: The Pulahan Movement in Leyte, 1902-1907.” Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 43, no. 1/2 (2015): 1–139. Braünlein, Peter. "Who Defines 'the Popular'? Post-Colonial Discourses on National Identity and Popular Christianity in the Philippines." In Religion, Tradition and the Popular: Transcultural Views from Asia and Europe, edited by Judith Schlehe and Evamaria Sandkühler, 75–111. History in Popular Cultures. Bielefeld, 2014. Constantino, Renato. The Philippines: A Past Revisited. Quezon City: Tala Publications Inc., 1975. Fernandez, Doreen. “The Philippine Press System: 1811-1989.” Philippine Studies 37, no. 3 (1989): 317–44. Foucault, Michel. Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason. Translated by Richard Howard. Vintage Books Edition. New York: Random House, Inc., 1988. Funtecha, Henry. “The Making of a ‘Queen City’: The Case of Iloilo 1890s-1930s.” Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 20, no. 2/3 (September 1992): 107–32. Goh, Daniel. “Postcolonial Disorientations: Colonial Ethnography and the Vectors of the Philippine Nation in the Imperial Frontier.” Postcolonial Studies 11, no. 3 (2008): 259–76. Guerrero, Milagros. “The Colorum Uprisings, 1924-1931.” Asian Studies 5, no. 1 (1967): 65–78. Holt, Elizabeth Mary. Colonizing Filipinas: Nineteenth-Century Representations of the Philippines in Western Historiography. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 2002. Ileto, Reynaldo. Filipinos and Their Revolution: Event, Discourse, and Historiography. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1998.__________. Pasyon and Revolution: Popular Movements in the Philippines, 1840-1910. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1979. Kaufmann, John. Kapulúngan Binisayá-Ininglís. Iloilo: La Editorial, 1935. https://www.gutenberg.ph/previews/kaufmann/KVED-Body.pdf. Lanternari, Vittorio. “Nativistic and Socio-Religious Movements: A Reconsideration.” Comparative Studies in Society and History 16, no. 4 (September 1974): 483–503. Larkin, John. Sugar and the Origins of Modern Philippine Society. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993. Madrid, Randy, and Joefe Santarita. “Montor: Iloilo’s Robinhood and Reluctant Revolutionary.” In The Struggle Against the Spaniards and the Americans in Western Visayas: Papers on the 1st and 2nd Conferences on the West Visayan Phase of the Philippine Revolution, edited by Henry Funtecha and Melanie Jalandoni Padilla, 129-135. Iloilo: UP in the Visayas Centennial Committee, 1998. Magos, Alicia P. “Birdin: Bukidnon (Sulod) Revolutionary Hero.” In The Struggle Against the Spaniards and the Americans in Western Visayas: Papers on the 1st and 2nd Conferences on the West Visayan Phase of the Philippine Revolution, edited by Henry Funtecha and Melanie Jalandoni Padilla, 125-128. Iloilo: UP in the Visayas Centennial Committee, 1998. __________. The Enduring Ma-Aram Tradition: An Ethnography of a Kinaray-a Village in Antique. Quezon City: New Day Publishers, 1992. Marco, Sophia. “Dios-Dios in the Visayas.” Philippine Studies 49, no. 1 (2001): 42–77. McCoy, Alfred. “A Queen Dies Slowly: The Rise and Decline of Iloilo City.” In Philippine Social History: Global Trade and Local Transformations, edited by Alfred McCoy and Edilberto de Jesus, 297–358. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1982. __________. “Baylan: Animist Religion and Philippine Peasant Ideology.” Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 10, no. 3 (September 1982): 141–94. __________. “Sugar Barons: Formation of a Native Planter Class in the Colonial Philippines.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 19, no. 3–4 (1992): 106–41. Oosterwal, Gottfried. “Messianic Movements.” Philippine Sociological Review 16, no. 1 (1968): 40–50. Pertierra, Raul. “Philippine Studies and the New Ethnography.” In Cultures and Texts: Representations of Philippine Society, edited by Raul Pertierra and Eduardo Ugarte, 121–37. Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press, 1994. Rafael, Vicente. White Love and Other Events in Filipino History. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 2000. Spivak, Gayatri. “Can the Subaltern Speak?” In Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture, edited by Cary Nelson and Lawrence Grossberg, 271–313. London: MacMillan Education LTD, 1988. Sturtevant, David. “Guardia de Honor: Revitalization with the Revolution.” Asian Studies 4, no. 2 (1966): 342–52. Tan, Samuel K. A History of the Philippines. Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press, 1995. Reprint, 2012. Vergara, Benito Jr. Displaying Filipinos: Photography and Colonialism in Early 20th Century Philippines. Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press, 1995. Other References Arellano Law Foundation. The LawPhil Project. https://www.lawphil.net/ Cruz-Lucero, Rosario, Doreen Fernandez, John Barrios, and Jeffrey Yap. “Ilonggo.” Our Islands, Our People: The Histories and Cultures of the Filipino Nation (blog), 2018. https://ourislandsourpeople.wordpress.com/ilonggo/. Hudtohan, Emiliano. “Makinaugalingon Advocacy of Rosendo Mejica.” Dr. Emiliano Hudtohan (blog), July 23, 2014. http://emilianohudtohan.com/makinaugalingon-advocacy-of-rosendo-mejica/. Lagos, Joy, and Nazaria Lagos. "Remembering Don Rosendo Mejica." The News Today Online Edition, March 12, 2007. http://www.thenewstoday.info/2007/03/12/remembering.don.rosendo.mejica.html. Lua, Shirley. “Rediscovering the Rosendo Mejica Museum in Molo, Iloilo.” Lifestyle Inquirer, January 4, 2016. https://lifestyle.inquirer.net/218350/rediscovering-the-rosendo-mejica-museum-in-molo-iloilo/.
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30

Tadem, Eduardo C. "How Marcos Undermined Philippine Agriculture and Marginalized Further the Peasantry." Philippine Journal of Public Policy: Interdisciplinary Development Perspectives 2022 (2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.54096/goxe9779.

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31

Belonias, Beatriz, Czarina Platino, and Jessa Malanguis. "Agrobiodiversity of Home Gardens in Selected Marginal Upland Villages of Inopacan, Leyte, Philippines." Annals of Tropical Research, September 2, 2014, 48–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.32945/atr36s4.2014.

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Home gardens are subsistence crop production systems that significantly contribute to the socio-ecological resilience of peasant communities reducing vulnerability and ensuring food security. Because of their small size, they are neglected repositories of biological diversity. This paper describes the agrobiodiversity and management of home gardens in about 79 households in three marginal upland villages of Inopacan, Leyte. Semi-structured interviews and actual home garden visits were done to collect data. Results show that home gardens studied had high species diversity and exhibited a multilayered structure. A total of 171 species in 74 families and 146 genera were documented. The composites (Asteraceae) had the most number of genera and species followed by the orchids (Orchidaceae), legumes (Fabaceae) and aroids (Araceae). More than 70% of the species were exotics which were mostly ornamental plants. Erect herbs were the most common, followed by trees, shrubs, herbaceous vines and epiphytes. Majority of the species were ornamentals followed by fruit trees, medicinal plants, vegetables and spice plants, grown primarily for home use (62%) rather than as source of income. Established and managed by family members who provide free labor, the gardens mostly utilized cost-free planting materials and with no fertilizer or pesticide application.
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32

"Irrigation practices: peasant-farming settlement schemes and traditional cultures." Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences 316, no. 1537 (February 13, 1986): 229–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsta.1986.0006.

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Science has been highly successful in soil conditioning, plant breeding, and in pest and disease control, but has not yet turned its full attention to making the best use of water for irrigation. As water becomes scarcer worldwide so the need for more efficient water use becomes a necessity for peasant agriculture. It is to this theme that this paper principally addresses itself. In SE Asia flooded rice irrigation occupies some 70 Mha and is expanding at such a rate that water is becoming increasingly expensive to provide. In these circumstances there is a need to look critically at the methods of irrigating and growing rice. The practice of transplanting seedlings and whether rice could be grown equally as successfully in non-flooded conditions requires investigation. The way ahead is being provided by the economies forced on farmers who pump water from their own boreholes. Although the Dumoga project in north Sulawesi, Indonesia, has not yet reached the point of farm development where water shortage is a problem, that time will come; and the scientific programme that is already underway in the area (under the auspices of the ‘Project Wallace’ expedition) could usefully be expanded to include the technical and sociological problems involved in water allocation. Similar studies would also benefit hill irrigation in Nepal, Peru, the Philippines and similar mountainous areas. Excessive soil saturation and poor water control are frequent causes of catastrophic landslides and soil loss from erosion. In those arid zones with a tradition of irrigation and access to oil revenues, better water control can be achieved by the introduction of combined manual and electronic control systems. In Iraq, for example, these systems will help to make the best use of the restricted waters of the Euphrates basin. Scientific advance in irrigation methods is more difficult to foresee in the arid sub-Saharan areas, where the adoption of techniques already successfully applied elsewhere is likely to be the prime necessity.
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33

Jack, Gavin, Jagjit Plahe, and Sarah Wright. "EXPRESS: Development as Freedom? Insights from a Farmer-led Sustainable Agriculture NGO in the Philippines." Human Relations, March 19, 2022, 001872672210907. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00187267221090779.

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This study addresses freedom, work and organisation by problematising Amartya Sen’s pluralistic notion of (development as) freedom through a fieldwork study of a Filipino NGO that promotes sustainable agriculture. In this context, peasant farmers face increasing threat from intersecting agrarian and climate crises, exacerbated by mainstream economic paradigms for agricultural development. For Sen, development encompasses the process of expanding the ‘substantive freedoms’ of people (freedom to), and removing sources of ‘unfreedom’ (freedom from). However, it is not clear in Sen’s work how such freedoms are relationally constituted and thus the manner of the ‘labour of agential becoming’ (Amer, 2021) at the core of Sen’s thought. We therefore ask: How do agroecological work and organisational practices of grassroots development promote freedom for small-scale farmers under climate threat in the Global South? Our analysis identifies a novel form of freedom - labelled ‘freedom with’ – defined as a set of relational, multi-actor capabilities and organising practices that constitute alternative, future-oriented ways of doing and being. ‘Freedom with’ enables us to better understand how and why the labour of agential becoming works, offering a theoretical extension of Sen’s notion of freedom with implications for debates in our field on sustainability and beyond-capitalist organising.
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34

Casil, Vincent. "Production of Homo Economicus in the Public Spheres of the Filipino Masses and Middle Class." Scientia - The International Journal on the Liberal Arts 11, no. 1 (March 31, 2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.57106/scientia.v11i1.11.

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One way to address the question of how subjects are being shaped in capitalist society is to examine how individuals embrace the ideals of homo economicus. The paper contributes to the discussion of capitalist subjectivity by examining how the ideals of homo economicus are being embraced by the two diverging public spheres in the Philippines: the masses and the middle class. Drawing from the study of the moral politics of the Filipino people and highlighting factors such as livelihood and linguistic condition as important social factors, the paper claims that although the ideals of self-entrepreneur can be observed in the middle-class sphere, they rather have a limited influence in the mass sphere. Premised on those points, the paper further notes the significance of the integrative approach addressing the issue of the formation of subjectivity. In the end, these explorations offer a possible way to move beyond the problematic morals and subjectivities promoted by capitalism. References Amariglio, Jack and Callari, Antonio. “Marxian Value Theory and the Problem of the Subject: The Role of Commodity Fetishism” in Rethinking Marxism: A Journal of Economics, Culture & Society 2 No. 3 (1989): 31-60, DOI: 10.1080/08935698908657868 Balibar, Etienne. “Foucault and Marx: The question of nominalism” Michel Foucault Philosopher (Hertfordshire: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1992). Bohyeong, Kim. “Think rich, feel hurt: the critique of capitalism and the production of affect in the making of financial subjects in South Korea, Cultural Studies (2016): 1-13. DOI:10.1080/09502386.2016.1264005 Brown, Wendy. Edgework: critical essays on knowledge and politics. New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 2005. Deville, Joe, “Regenerating market attachments: consumer credit debt collection and the capture of affect” in Journal of Cultural Economy 5 No. 4 (2012): 423–439. Dor, Joël. Introduction to the reading of Lacan: The unconscious structured like a language. New York: Other Press,1998. Foucault Michel. The birth of biopolitics: lectures at the Collège de France 1978. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. Harvey, David. Marx, capital, and the madness of economic reason. Oxford University Press, 2017. Konings, Martjin. The emotional logic of capitalism. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2015. Kusaka, Wataru. Moral Politics in the Philippines, Inequality, Democracy, and the Urban Poor. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila Press, 2019. Lazzarato, Maurizio. Signs and Machines, Capitalism and the Production of Subjectivity. Trans. J. D. Jordan. California: Semiotext(e), 2014. ________________. The Making of Indebted Man, An Essay on Neoliberal Condition. Trans. J. D. Jordan. California: Semiotext(e), 2011. Leggett John. “Economic Insecurity and Working-Class Consciousness” in American Sociological Review 29 no. 2 (1964): 226-234. Lorenzini, Daniele. “Governmentality, subjectivity, and the neoliberal form of life” in Journal for Cultural Research (2018): 1-14 DOI: http://doi.org/10.1080/14797585.2018.1461357 Manstead, Antony S. R. “The psychology of social class: How socioeconomic status impacts thought, feelings, and behavior” in British Journal of Social Psychology 57 (2018): 267–291. McKinlay, Alan. “Performativity and the politics of identity: Putting Butler to work” Critical perspectives on accounting 21, no. 3 (2010): 232-242. Miyazaki, Hirokazu. Arbitraging Japan. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2013. Ortega, Arnisson Andre. Neoliberalizing Spaces in the Philippines: Suburbanization, Transnational Migration, and Dispossession. London: Rowman & Littlefield, 2016. Pellandini-Simanyi, L., Hammer, F., and Vargha, Z. “The financialization of everyday life or the domestication of finance” Cultural studies, 29 No. 5–6 (2015): 733–759. Read, Jason “A Genealogy Of Homo-Economicus: Neoliberalism and The Production Of Subjectivity” A Foucault for the 21st Century: governmentality, biopolitics and discipline in the new millennium. Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars, 2009. Scott, James C. The Moral Economy of the Peasant Rebellion and subsistence in South East Asia. Yale: Yale University Press, 1976. Short, Nicola, “Market/society: mapping conceptions of power, ideology and subjectivity in Polanyi, Hayek, Foucault, Lukács” Globalizations (2018): 1-15 DOI: http://doi.org/10.1080/14747731.2018.1498213 Soon, Chuan Yean, “Politics from Below Culture, Religion, and Popular Politics in Tanauan City, Batangas” in Philippine Studies 56 no. 4 (2008): 413-442. Zeitlin, Maurice, “Economic Insecurity and the Political Attitudes of Cuban Workers” American Sociological Review 31 no. 1 (1966): 35-51.
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35

Huy, Nguyen Quynh. "Nonfarm Activities and Household Production Choices in Smallholder Agriculture in Vietnam." VNU Journal of Science: Economics and Business 33, no. 5E (December 28, 2017). http://dx.doi.org/10.25073/2588-1108/vnueab.4105.

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This paper explores the effects of labour movement into nonfarm activities on household production choices in rural Vietnam. It finds that agricultural production declines and there are negative effects on farm revenue. However, these conclusions are limited in the north. Households in the north readjust their production structure by investing in livestock and other crops that require less labour. Rice farmers in the south have managed to keep their rice production unaffected by hiring more labour, and investing more capital to switch to less labour-intensive farming. The evidence of relaxing liquidity constraints is found, at least in the short run. While the decline in agricultural revenue in the north suggests some level of substitution between farming and nonfarm activities, the stability in rice production at the national level brings good news to policy makers and food security in Vietnam, despite rapid structural change over the past decades. Keywords Nonfarm, food security, rice self-sufficiency, agricultural transformation, household agricultural production References Akram-Lodhi, A.H., 2005. Vietnam’s agriculture: processes of rich peasant accumulation and mechanisms. Journal of Agrarian Change, 5(1), pp.73–116.Barrett, B., Reardon, T. and Webb, P., 2001. Nonfarm income diversification and household livelihood strategies in rural Africa: concepts, dynamics, and policy implications. Food Policy, 26, pp. 315–331.Brennan, D. et al., 2012. Rural-urban migration and Vietnamese agriculture. In Contributed paper at the 56th AARES Annual Conference. Fremantle, Western Australia.Dang, KS., Nguyen, NQ., Pham, QD., Truong, TTT. and Beresford, M 2006. Policy reform and the transformation of Vietnamese agriculture, in Rapid growth of selected Asian economies: lessons and implications for agriculture and food security, Policy Assistance Series 1/3, FAO, Bangkok.De Brauw, A., 2010. Seasonal Migration and Agricultural Production in Vietnam. Journal of Development Studies, 46(1), pp.114–139.Glewwe, P., Dollar, D. and Agrawal, N., 1994. Economic growth, poverty, and household welfare in Vietnam, World Bank, Washington, DC.Haggblade, S., Hazell, P. and Reardon, T., 2007. Transforming the rural nonfarm economy. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland.Hazell, P. and Rahman, A., 2014. New directions for smallholder agriculture 1st ed., Oxford University Press, New York.Hoang, T.X., Pham, C.S. and Ulubaşoǧlu, M., 2014. Non-farm activity, household expenditure, and poverty reduction in rural Vietnam: 2002-2008. World Development, 64, pp.554–568.Huang, J., Wang, X. and Qiu, H.G., 2012. Small-scale farmers in China in the face of modernization and globalization, International Institute for Environment and Development/HIVOS, London.Kajisa, K., 2007. Personal networks and non-agricultural employment: the case of a farming village in the Philippines. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 55(4), pp.668–707.Kilic, T, Carletto, C, Miluka, J. and Savastano, S., 2009. Rural nonfarm income and its impact on agriculture: Evidence from Albania. Agricultural Economics, 40(2), pp.139–60.Lanjouw, J. and Lanjouw, P., 2001. The rural non-farm sector: issues and evidence from developing countries. Agricultural Economics, 26, pp.1–23.Li, L., 2013. Migration, remittances, and agricultural productivity in small farming systems in Northwest China. China Agricultural Economic Review, 5(1), pp.5–23. Minot, N., 2006. Income diversification and poverty in the Northern Uplands of Vietnam, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC.Minot, N. and Goletti, F., 1998. Export liberalization and household welfare: the case of rice in Vietnam. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 80(4), pp.738–749.Nguyen, H.Q., 2017. Analyzing the economies of crop diversification in rural Vietnam using an input distance function. Agricultural Systems, 157, pp. 148-156.Oseni, G. and Winters, P., 2009. Rural nonfarm activities and agricultural crop production in Nigeria. Agricultural Economics, 40(2), pp.189–201.Otsuka, K., Liu, Y. and Yamauchi, F., 2013. Factor endowments, wage growth, and changing food self-sufficiency: Evidence from country-level panel data. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 95(5), pp. 1252–1258.Pham, VH, Nguyen, TMH, Kompas, T, Che, TN. and Bui, T., 2015. Rice production, trade and the poor: regional effects of rice export policy on households in Vietnam. Journal of Agricultural Economics, 66(2), pp. 280–307.Pingali, P.L., Xuan, V.T. and Khiem, N.T., 1998. Prospects for sustaining Vietnam’s re-acquired rice export status. Food Policy, 22(4), pp. 345–358.Rozelle, S., Taylor, J.E. and DeBrauw, A., 1999. Migration, remittances, and agricultural productivity in China. American Economic Review, 89(2), pp.287–291.Stampini, M. and Davis, B., 2009. Does non-agricultural labor relax farmers’ credit constraints? Evidence from longitudinal data for Vietnam. Agricultural Economics, 40(2), pp.177–188.Taylor, J.E. and Martin, P.L., 2001. Human capital: migration and rural population change. In G. Rausser & B. Gardner, eds. Handbook of Agricultural Economics, vol 1A. New York: Elsevier Science, pp. 457–511.Taylor, J.E., Rozelle, S. and De Brauw, A., 2003. Migration and incomes in source communities: a new economic of migration perspective from China. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 52(1), pp.75–101.Taylor, J.E. and Lybbert, T., 2015. Essentials of Development Economics, University of California Press, Berkeley.Thirwall, A.P., 2006. Growth and development with special reference to developing economies 8th ed., Palgrave Macmillan, New York.van de Walle, D. and Cratty, D., 2004. Is the emerging non-farm market economy the route out of poverty in Vietnam? Economics of Transition, 12(2), pp.237–274.Warr, P., 2009. Aggregate and sectoral productivity growth in Thailand and Indonesia, Working Papers in Trade and Development, 2009/10, Arndt-Corden Department of Economics, Australian National University.Warr, P., 2014. Food insecurity and its determinants. Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics, 58(4), pp. 519-37.Weiss, C.R., 1996. Exits from a declining sector: econometric evidence from a panel of upper-Austrian farms 1980-1990, Working Paper No. 9601, Department of Economics, University of Linz.Wiggins, S, Kirsten, J. and Llambí, L., 2010. The future of small farms. World Development, 38(10), pp. 1341–48.World Bank, 2006. Vietnam: business, Development Report No 34474-VN, Hanoi, Vietnam. KeywordsNonfarm, food security, rice self-sufficiency, agricultural transformation, household agricultural production References Akram-Lodhi, A.H., 2005. Vietnam’s agriculture: processes of rich peasant accumulation and mechanisms. Journal of Agrarian Change, 5(1), pp.73–116.Barrett, B., Reardon, T. and Webb, P., 2001. Nonfarm income diversification and household livelihood strategies in rural Africa: concepts, dynamics, and policy implications. Food Policy, 26, pp. 315–331.Brennan, D. et al., 2012. Rural-urban migration and Vietnamese agriculture. In Contributed paper at the 56th AARES Annual Conference. Fremantle, Western Australia.Dang, KS., Nguyen, NQ., Pham, QD., Truong, TTT. and Beresford, M 2006. Policy reform and the transformation of Vietnamese agriculture, in Rapid growth of selected Asian economies: lessons and implications for agriculture and food security, Policy Assistance Series 1/3, FAO, Bangkok.De Brauw, A., 2010. Seasonal Migration and Agricultural Production in Vietnam. Journal of Development Studies, 46(1), pp.114–139.Glewwe, P., Dollar, D. and Agrawal, N., 1994. Economic growth, poverty, and household welfare in Vietnam, World Bank, Washington, DC.Haggblade, S., Hazell, P. and Reardon, T., 2007. Transforming the rural nonfarm economy. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland.Hazell, P. and Rahman, A., 2014. New directions for smallholder agriculture 1st ed., Oxford University Press, New York.Hoang, T.X., Pham, C.S. and Ulubaşoǧlu, M., 2014. Non-farm activity, household expenditure, and poverty reduction in rural Vietnam: 2002-2008. World Development, 64, pp.554–568.Huang, J., Wang, X. and Qiu, H.G., 2012. Small-scale farmers in China in the face of modernization and globalization, International Institute for Environment and Development/HIVOS, London.Kajisa, K., 2007. Personal networks and non-agricultural employment: the case of a farming village in the Philippines. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 55(4), pp.668–707.Kilic, T, Carletto, C, Miluka, J. and Savastano, S., 2009. Rural nonfarm income and its impact on agriculture: Evidence from Albania. Agricultural Economics, 40(2), pp.139–60.Lanjouw, J. and Lanjouw, P., 2001. The rural non-farm sector: issues and evidence from developing countries. Agricultural Economics, 26, pp.1–23.Li, L., 2013. Migration, remittances, and agricultural productivity in small farming systems in Northwest China. China Agricultural Economic Review, 5(1), pp.5–23. Minot, N., 2006. Income diversification and poverty in the Northern Uplands of Vietnam, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC.Minot, N. and Goletti, F., 1998. Export liberalization and household welfare: the case of rice in Vietnam. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 80(4), pp.738–749.Nguyen, H.Q., 2017. Analyzing the economies of crop diversification in rural Vietnam using an input distance function. Agricultural Systems, 157, pp. 148-156.Oseni, G. and Winters, P., 2009. Rural nonfarm activities and agricultural crop production in Nigeria. Agricultural Economics, 40(2), pp.189–201.Otsuka, K., Liu, Y. and Yamauchi, F., 2013. Factor endowments, wage growth, and changing food self-sufficiency: Evidence from country-level panel data. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 95(5), pp. 1252–1258.Pham, VH, Nguyen, TMH, Kompas, T, Che, TN. and Bui, T., 2015. Rice production, trade and the poor: regional effects of rice export policy on households in Vietnam. Journal of Agricultural Economics, 66(2), pp. 280–307.Pingali, P.L., Xuan, V.T. and Khiem, N.T., 1998. Prospects for sustaining Vietnam’s re-acquired rice export status. Food Policy, 22(4), pp. 345–358.Rozelle, S., Taylor, J.E. and DeBrauw, A., 1999. Migration, remittances, and agricultural productivity in China. American Economic Review, 89(2), pp.287–291.Stampini, M. and Davis, B., 2009. Does non-agricultural labor relax farmers’ credit constraints? Evidence from longitudinal data for Vietnam. Agricultural Economics, 40(2), pp.177–188.Taylor, J.E. and Martin, P.L., 2001. Human capital: migration and rural population change. In G. Rausser & B. Gardner, eds. Handbook of Agricultural Economics, vol 1A. New York: Elsevier Science, pp. 457–511.Taylor, J.E., Rozelle, S. and De Brauw, A., 2003. Migration and incomes in source communities: a new economic of migration perspective from China. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 52(1), pp.75–101.Taylor, J.E. and Lybbert, T., 2015. Essentials of Development Economics, University of California Press, Berkeley.Thirwall, A.P., 2006. Growth and development with special reference to developing economies 8th ed., Palgrave Macmillan, New York.van de Walle, D. and Cratty, D., 2004. Is the emerging non-farm market economy the route out of poverty in Vietnam? Economics of Transition, 12(2), pp.237–274.Warr, P., 2009. Aggregate and sectoral productivity growth in Thailand and Indonesia, Working Papers in Trade and Development, 2009/10, Arndt-Corden Department of Economics, Australian National University.Warr, P., 2014. Food insecurity and its determinants. Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics, 58(4), pp. 519-37.Weiss, C.R., 1996. Exits from a declining sector: econometric evidence from a panel of upper-Austrian farms 1980-1990, Working Paper No. 9601, Department of Economics, University of Linz.Wiggins, S, Kirsten, J. and Llambí, L., 2010. The future of small farms. World Development, 38(10), pp. 1341–48.World Bank, 2006. Vietnam: business, Development Report No 34474-VN, Hanoi, Vietnam.
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