POLI 227 Chapter 6: Agrarian Reform and the Politics of Rural Change

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Chapter 6: agrarian reform and the politics of rural change. In the countryside, there are substantial disparities in land ownership produces rigid class systems. Peasants: family farmers who work small plots and maintain a traditional lifestyle. Hierarchical structure: powerful landowners midsized landowners landowning peasants tenants. Cultural values stressing caution and conservatism. Peasant political culture is described as fatalistic and isolated. The peasant feels at the mercy of the government. Peasants are neither inherently conservative nor intrinsically radical. When their moral economy is disregarded, peasants begin to seek change. The type of outside groups they ally with: the responsiveness of the political system, the types of political options offered. Peasants" economic and political concerns revolve around: the prices they receive for crops, consumer prices of goods, taxes, availability of land. The issue of land has been the most volatile. The politics of agrarian reform. Agrarian reform typically involves redistribution of farmland from landlords to the landless.

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