Rural development is linked crucially with rural structure, though
the latter is often difficult to analyse. This book analyses rural
classes and the diverse relations between producers in order to
understand the relationship between Third World farmers and the
international economy, and the significance of this for development
and underdevelopment. The author introduces a number of theoretical
distinctions and devises a systematic framework which is applied to
the analysis of a range of rural producers. The book assesses a
number of strategies employed in planned development in the light
of their implications for rural social structure, and thus for
development in the Third World. This book provides an intensive and
original conceptual and practical discussion of the possibilities
for development under capitalism, and will be of interest to
economists, political scientists and sociologists, as well as those
working in development studies.
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