Historical Agrarian Change and its Connections to Contemporary Agricultural Extension in Northwest Cambodia

TitleHistorical Agrarian Change and its Connections to Contemporary Agricultural Extension in Northwest Cambodia
Annotated RecordNot Annotated
Year of Publication2024
AuthorsCook BR, Satizábal P, Touch V, McGregor A, Diepart J-C, Utomo A, Harrigan N, McKinnon K, Srean P, Thong_Anh_Tran _, Babon A
Secondary TitleCritical Asian Studies
Volume56
Issue1
Pagination25-52
Key themesAgriculturalModernization, CivilSociety-Donors, Distribution, MigrationLabour
Abstract

This historical overview uses a political ecology approach to examine agricultural change over time in Northwest Cambodia. It focuses on key historical periods, actors, and processes that continue to shape power, land, and farming relations in the region, emphasizing the relevance of this history for contemporary investments in agricultural extension services and research as part of the Zero Hunger by 2030 policy agenda for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG). Agricultural extension projects need to engage critically with historically complex and dynamic power, land, and farming relations–not only as the basis of social relations but as central to understanding the contemporary manifestation of farmer decision making and practice. Initiatives such as the SDGs replicate long histories of externally driven power-relations that orient benefits from changed practices towards elites in urban centers or distant global actors. Efforts to realize zero hunger by 2030 are endangered by neglect for the path-dependency of power-land-farming relations, which stretch from the past into the present to structure farmer decision making and practices.

URLhttps://doi.org/10.1080/14672715.2023.2298430
Availability

Available for download

Countries

Cambodia

Document Type

Journal Article