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  • Changes in Social Capital: A Case Study of Collective Rice Farming Practices in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam /

Tác giả CN Le, Anh Tuan
Nhan đề Changes in Social Capital: A Case Study of Collective Rice Farming Practices in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam /Le Anh Tuan, Alison Cottrell, David King.
Thông tin xuất bản 2014
Mô tả vật lý p. 68 - 99.
Tóm tắt This paper describes how the social capital of rice farmers of the Mekong Delta of Vietnam, as manifested in the tradition of collective farming practice, has changed. Collective rice farming persisted for decades, irrespective of critical events that challenged its continuation, due to two key factors: the high need for collective farming to ensure subsistence, and the availability of a closely knit social network that facilitated the exchange of labor. Despite its longevity, the practice of collective farming, particularly in terms of labor exchange and mutual aid in farming activities, has not been maintained under current agrarian reforms. Land reform, increased mechanization, and shortened crop cycles leading to labor shortages have all resulted in individualized rice farming, making mobilization for spontaneous collective action at the community level challenging.
Đề mục chủ đề Việt Nam học--TVĐHHN.
Đề mục chủ đề Contemporary,--Vietnam,--1986 - 2005
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Mekong Delta
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Nghiên cứu Việt Nam.
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Collective rice farming practice
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Social Capital
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Vietnam
Tác giả(bs) CN King, David.
Tác giả(bs) CN Cottrell ,Alison
Nguồn trích Journal of Vietnamese Studies- 2014, Vol. 9, No. 2
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044|aenk
1000 |aLe, Anh Tuan
24510|aChanges in Social Capital: A Case Study of Collective Rice Farming Practices in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam /|cLe Anh Tuan, Alison Cottrell, David King.
260|c2014
300|ap. 68 - 99.
3620 |aVol.9, No. 2 (Spring. 2014)
520|aThis paper describes how the social capital of rice farmers of the Mekong Delta of Vietnam, as manifested in the tradition of collective farming practice, has changed. Collective rice farming persisted for decades, irrespective of critical events that challenged its continuation, due to two key factors: the high need for collective farming to ensure subsistence, and the availability of a closely knit social network that facilitated the exchange of labor. Despite its longevity, the practice of collective farming, particularly in terms of labor exchange and mutual aid in farming activities, has not been maintained under current agrarian reforms. Land reform, increased mechanization, and shortened crop cycles leading to labor shortages have all resulted in individualized rice farming, making mobilization for spontaneous collective action at the community level challenging.
65007|aViệt Nam học|2TVĐHHN.
65010|aContemporary,|zVietnam,|y1986 - 2005
6530 |aMekong Delta
6530 |aNghiên cứu Việt Nam.
6530 |aCollective rice farming practice
6530 |aSocial Capital
6530 |aVietnam
7001 |a King, David.
7001 |aCottrell ,Alison
773|tJournal of Vietnamese Studies|g2014, Vol. 9, No. 2
890|a0|b0|c0|d0

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