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Tenancy Relations in India: Observations from a field study
Approaches of different schools of thought to tenancy have been different for its impact on agriculture. As agriculture and allied activities have increasingly become loss making venture for more than last two decades. Farmers, especially the food crop producers, have either shifted to more profitab...
| Tác giả chính: | |
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| Định dạng: | Printed Book |
| Được phát hành: |
Jaipur
Institute of Development Studies
2014
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| Truy cập trực tuyến: | http://10.26.1.76/ks/005756.pdf |
| LEADER | 01395nam a22001337a 4500 | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 100 | |a S. Mohanakumar |9 30176 | ||
| 245 | |a Tenancy Relations in India: Observations from a field study | ||
| 260 | |a Jaipur |b Institute of Development Studies |c 2014 | ||
| 500 | |a IDSJ working paper 173 | ||
| 520 | |a Approaches of different schools of thought to tenancy have been different for its impact on agriculture. As agriculture and allied activities have increasingly become loss making venture for more than last two decades. Farmers, especially the food crop producers, have either shifted to more profitable commercial crops or lease out land to farm workers and peasants for rent. Wage labour and peasants are rather forced to lease-in land to make up for the loss in employment days in the crop production sector. It is argued that forced tenancy of wage labour and peasants is a variant of hunger leasing and such tenants are subjected to multiple forms of exploitation by money lenders, land owners, and traders of agricultural commodities. The price fall of agricultural commodities driven agrarian distress and its culmination into massive spate of suicides is closely linked to the lease land cultivation by peasants, wage labour and small farmers. | ||
| 856 | |u http://10.26.1.76/ks/005756.pdf | ||
| 942 | |c KS | ||
| 999 | |c 81302 |d 81302 | ||
| 952 | |0 0 |1 0 |4 0 |7 0 |9 73335 |a MGUL |b MGUL |d 2016-04-06 |l 0 |r 2016-04-06 |w 2016-04-06 |y KS | ||