Land Livelihood and Civility in Southern Mexico
English

About The Book

<p>In the Valley of Oaxaca in Mexico's Southern Highland region three facets of sociocultural life have been interconnected and interactive from colonial times to the present: first community land as a space to live and work; second a civil-religious system managed by reciprocity and market activity wherein obligations of citizenship office and festive sponsorships are met by expenditures of labor-time and money; and third livelihood. In this book noted Oaxacan scholar Scott Cook draws on thirty-five years of fieldwork (1965-1990) in the region to present a masterful ethnographic historical account of how nine communities in the Oaxaca Valley have striven to maintain land livelihood and civility in the face of transformational and cumulative change across five centuries.</p> <p>Drawing on an extensive database that he accumulated through participant observation household surveys interviews case studies and archival work in more than twenty Oaxacan communities Cook documents and explains how peasant-artisan villagers in the Oaxaca Valley have endeavored over centuries to secure and/or defend land worked and negotiated to subsist and earn a living and striven to meet expectations and obligations of local citizenship. His findings identify elements and processes that operate across communities or distinguish some from others. They also underscore the fact that landholding is crucial for the sociocultural life of the valley. Without land for agriculture and resource extraction occupational options are restricted livelihood is precarious and contingent and civility is jeopardized.</p>
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