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RURAL LIVELIHOODS (4) answer(s).
 
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ID:   083851


Development prospects in Eastern Indonesia: Learning from Oelua's diverse economy / Carnegie, Michelle   Journal Article
Carnegie, Michelle Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Summary/Abstract This paper explores the effects of different representations of informal economies in Third World settings. Both the neoclassical and political economy approaches have represented the informal economy as a transient entity, and the non-capitalist practices it comprises as being remnant economic forms, or as already capitalist. Mainstream development discourse (that reflects the neoliberal paradigm) continues to ignore the value and potential of non-capitalist practices and to represent them as inconsequential to development outcomes. Meanwhile contemporary livelihood studies across the social sciences have documented the continuing vibrancy of different and hybrid economic forms in the Asia Pacific. In this paper, I use a diverse-economies approach to explore the complexities of the village economy of Oelua in Rote, in the so-called lagging region of Eastern Indonesia. Drawing on anti-essentialist Marxist theory in economic geography, I describe the multiple, locally specific and coexisting practices that comprise Oelua's diverse economy, which include distributions of surplus labour to promote social and economic well-being. I argue that recognising informal village economies as an important development resource could begin a process of building diverse development trajectories in Eastern Indonesia, complementing mainstream development proposals to attract foreign direct investment, shore up development assistance and source out-migration.
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2
ID:   150928


Household biomass energy choice and its policy implications on improving rural livelihoods in Sichuan, China / Chen, Qiu; Yang, Haoran ; Liu, Tianbiao ; Zhang, Lin   Journal Article
Chen, Qiu Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract It is widely known that a switch from traditional biomass energy to modern clean, safe and efficient energy could improve local rural livelihoods by enhancing the access to ‘high quality’ energy and reducing the negative impacts of traditional biomass energy on health, environment and living standards. Hence, in this paper, we used alternative-specific conditional logit model (ASCLM) to examine the rural household energy choice behaviors in Sichuan Province of China from the perspective of revealed and stated preferences. The results show that the fuel switching in our study region is not a simple unidirectional process from traditional biomass energy to modern fuels as incomes improve. Household energy choice behaviors could be not only affected by energy-specific characteristics such as fuel price, smoky level and safety risk, but also influenced by household-specific factors such as income level, age and educational level of the decision maker, household demographic structure, number of people frequently eating at home, distance to the nearest biomass collecting spot and household location, suggesting that government should attach more importance to simultaneously improve energy quality, control energy price and enhance household socio-economic status.
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3
ID:   142637


Small-scale cattle raising in East Java, Indonesia: a pathway out of poverty? / Priyanti, Atien; Cramb, Rob ; Hanifah, Vyta W ; Mahendri, I G A P   Article
Cramb, Rob Article
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Summary/Abstract Despite its small area and intensively cropped landscape, East Java accounts for 30% of Indonesia's cattle population. About two million households draw on family labour to raise cattle in backyard sheds and small enclosures, largely for cash income. In this paper, we examine the opportunity for such small-scale producers to benefit from Indonesia's economic transformation, given the rising urban demand for beef. The paper reports on a study in two contrasting sites in East Java – irrigated lowlands and rainfed uplands – to explore the constraints facing small-scale cattle producers in these environments, the means by which they have adapted to these constraints (especially by going beyond the farm household to access feed supplies) and possible means to enhance their production systems and incomes. The findings suggest that such cattle production systems can provide a viable source of livelihood, even for resource-poor households; hence, appropriately adapted cattle improvement programmes are a sensible component of a pro-poor development strategy.
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4
ID:   178465


Spices as the saviour? the complex vulnerabilities of three commodity crop booms and ethnic minority livelihoods in Yunnan's agr / Zuo, Zhenting ; Langill, Jennifer C; Turner, Sarah ; Rousseau, Jean-Francois   Journal Article
Zuo, Zhenting (et.al) Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Commodity crops are redefining land use and rural smallholder livelihoods across Asia. These crops often have boom-bust cycles with important implications for the drivers of farmer entry into and exit from particular cash crop opportunities. This paper offers a comparative analysis of the boom-bust processes of three popular spice crops cultivated in Yunnan Province, southwest China. Drawing from agrarian frontiers and rural livelihoods literature, we disentangle the vulnerability contexts associated with black cardamom, cinnamon and star anise production, finding that farmers cultivating these spices face a combination of interlocking forms of vulnerability. Despite the monetary potential that each crop offered during its ‘boom’, the associated environmental, economic and political vulnerabilities caused most farmers to exit their production, responding with myriad on-farm and off-farm diversification strategies. Using a multi-sited ethnographic approach, we draw on 52 in-depth interviews with ethnic minority cultivators, spice traders and local government officials to untangle the complexities associated with cash crop production in this agrarian frontier, the interwoven vulnerabilities that result in their ‘busts’ and the coping and adaptation strategies that smallholder farmers employ. Our findings underline the importance of disaggregating farmer vulnerabilities and the need for more nuanced policy responses to adequately support small-scale farmers.
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