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Migrants in Agricultural Development: A Study of Intrarural Migration PDF

269 Pages·1991·25.6 MB·English
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Edited by J. A. Mollett Migrants in Agricultural Development Foreword by Barbara E. Harrell-Bond MIGRANTS IN AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT Migrants in Agricultural Development A Study of Intrarural Migration Edited by J. A. Mollett Senior Research Associate, Queen Elizabeth House, University of Oxford Foreword by Barbara E. Harrell-Bond Director of the Refugee Studies Programme Queen Elizabeth House, University of Oxford M MACMILLAN © J. A. Mollett 1991 Foreword© Barbara E. Harrell-Bond 1991 Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 1991 All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without written permission. No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted save with written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 or under the terms of any licence permitting limited copying issued by the Copyright Licencing Agency, 33-4 Alfred Place, London WClE 7DP. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages. First edition 1991 Published by MACMILLAN ACADEMIC AND PROFESSIONAL LTD Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 2XS and London Companies and representatives throughout the world British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Migrants in agricultural development. 1. Agricultural industries. Economic development. Effects of migration of personnel. Personnel. Migration. Effects on economic development of agricultural industries I. Mollett, J. A. 1923- 338.1 ISBN 978-1-349-11832-8 ISBN 978-1-349-11830-4 (eBook) DOl 10.1007/978-1-349-11830-4 Contents List of Maps vii List of Tables viii List of Figures ix Foreword by Barbara E. Harrell-Bond X Acknowledgements xiv Notes on Contributors XV 1 Introduction 1 2 The Economic Rationale for Migration 9 3 International Migration Experience: An Overview of the Seven Case Studies 22 4 Rural Migration in England: The Long Historical Perspective Joan Thirsk 32 5 Land Settlement in Australia Since 1788 Bruce R. Davidson 56 6 Migrant Workers from East-Elbe and Eastern Europe in the Prussian 'Sugarbeet' Province of Saxony, 1830--1914 Hans-Heinrich Muller 77 7 Outline History of the Colonisation of Hokkaido, 1870--1930 Shiina Shigeaki 92 8 Migration and Adaptation: Developing New Farming Strategies on the American Grasslands, 1875-1925 D. Aidan McQuillan 111 9 Colonists and Transmigrants in Agricultural Development: Planned and Sponsored Settlement in Indonesia Sediono M. P. Tjondronegoro 132 v vi Contents 10 Migrations and Development in Rural Latin America Solon L. Ba"aclough 153 11 Forced Migration in Africa: An Overview of the Two Case Studies 175 12 Local Responses to Involuntary Relocation and Development in the Zambian portion of the Middle Zambezi Valley Thayer Scudder and Jonathan Habarad 178 13 Refugees and Agricultural Development in Tanzania Allen Armstrong 206 14 The Implications for Agricultural Development 222 Index 240 List of Maps 4.1 England. 34 4.2 Permanent settlement in the Lincolnshire marshland following temporary use for summer pastures in the Middle Ages. 38 5.1 Zones of growing season in Australia as determined by moisture and temperature. 57 5.2 Farming and grazing zones in Australia. 70 6.1 Main sugar beet areas in Germany, 1871-1918. 79 7.1 Japan. 93 7.2 Hokkaido: Area reclaimed to 1907. 101 8.1 Location of study area in Central Kansas. 117 9.1 Indonesia. 133 10.1 Latin America. 159 12.1 Gwembe District and the Kariba Lake Basin, Zambia. 179 13.1 Location of main refugee settlements/transit camps, Tanzania, 1987. 207 vii List of Tables 7.1 Population in Hokkaido, 1873/4-1926. 96 7.2 Immigration, area colonised and in rice, 1869-81 to 1923-35. 106 7.3 Size distribution of farms in Hokkaido, 1919, 1939 and 1%0. 106 7.4 Breeds of dairy cows in Hokkaido, 1917, 1926 and 1935. 106 7.5 Crops cultivated on Koshimizu Farm (500 ha.) c. 1890. 107 7.6 Value of Output, Hokkaido, 1870--1900. 107 9.1 Land tax collected (by hectares). 134 9.2 Swamp area in Indonesia, 1988. 145 9.3 Transmigration targets in Pelita V. 146 9.4 Transmigration summary, 1905-1988/89. 147 13.1 Crop production and marketing in three major refugee settlements (1986). 215 viii List of Figures 8.1 Percentage of farms engaged in simple and multiple enterprise strategies, 1875-1925. 121 8.2 Allocation of farm labour by each ethnic group, 1885-1925. 122 ix Foreword This benchmark study is about a relatively unresearched phenom enon, rural-to-rural migration and its effects upon agricultural devel opment. Migration studies have tended to concentrate on rural-to-urban flows, although, as is pointed out in the Introduction to this. book, in the late 1980s, whether voluntarily or forced by events absolutely beyond their control, throughout the world more people than ever in history are moving from one rural area to another. Moreover, although the book does not specifically comment on this issue, given the scarcity of resources in many parts of the world, it is likely that the numbers who are victims of forced mi gration will continue to exceed by far the numbers of pioneering, spontaneous migrants. Drawing on nine case studies, this book reports on a range of intrarural (rural-to-rural) migrations, including historical research on rural migration in England, Australia, Germany, Japan and the USA; contemporary studies from Indonesia, Latin America; and two cases of forced migration from Africa. Two major issues of central importance to government and development policy makers are addressed: is there evidence to show that the failure to allow migrants to develop their own initiatives and act as entrepreneurs by imposing some form of external control holds back development; and is it possible to encourage the positive trends shown to exist in rural-to rural migration by a more pragmatic approach? As Elizabeth Colson has noted, human beings are migratory ani mals. They treasure possibilities for mobility while seeing any at tempt to force mobility upon them as an infringement. This study concludes that rural migration, both spontaneous and forced, which involves land settlement can be, and often is, a positive force in agricultural development. Migration policy as a matter of international concern has devel oped over the twentieth century along with the independence and consolidation of states and the introduction of procedures to control mobility. Today great attention is being directed towards the prob lem of refugees, forced migrants. The World Bank and other inter national agencies are also becoming more aware of the adverse consequences of their development projects designed by them on communities these have displaced. This book is especially recom- X

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