RSO-30806 The Sociology of Farming and Rural Life
Course
Credits 6.00
Teaching method | Contact hours |
Lecture | 24 |
Practical | 16 |
Excursion (one day) | 4 |
Independent study | 0 |
Course coordinator(s) | dr. ir. CEP Jansen |
Lecturer(s) | dr. ir. CEP Jansen |
dr. PGM Hebinck | |
Examiner(s) | dr. ir. CEP Jansen |
dr. PGM Hebinck |
Language of instruction:
English
Assumed knowledge on:
RSO-20806 Agricultural and Rural Development: Sociological Perspectives; RSO-21306 Policy, People and Resources in Comparative Perspective; ENP-31806 Globalization and Sustainability of Food Production and Consumption
Continuation courses:
YSS-82812 BSc Thesis Sociology of Development; RSO-34306 Theorizing Development: Implications for Research
Contents:
Agricultural and rural transformation processes play an enabling or constraining role in addressing societal problems of hunger and poverty, environmental sustainability, and realizing a human-friendly mode of production. This course develops a sociological perspective on modernization tendencies, labour-agribusiness relationships, labour and household dynamics, land reform and land grabbing, the politics of high risk technologies (e.g. pesticides), and social justice views of agrarian movements. The course examines to what extent farming and rural life are shaped by markets, technology and cultural repertoires as well as by natural processes. This will enhance a critical understanding of the heterogeneity of farming and rural life and differential patterns of agricultural and rural development. For this purpose the peasantry debate will be re-examined and it will be questioned whether agricultural and rural development processes are sustained by the emergence of a new kind of peasantry or re-peasantization.
The course builds upon parts of the following theoretical traditions and perspectives:
a) sociology and anthropology of agriculture and the labour process theory;
b) commoditization perspective;
c) styles of farming analysis;
d) co-production or co-evolution of social and natural transformation processes;
e) theories of agrarian movements
Learning outcomes:
After successful completion of this course students are expected to be able to:
- apply analytical skills to explore differential patterns of agricultural and rural development;
- understand agricultural and rural development processes from a comparative perspective;
- distinguish different theoretical positions with regard to agricultural and rural development;
- evaluate the political implications of these academic positions with regard to actual issues such as food provisioning
and sustainability;
- critically reflect on agricultural and rural transformation processes;
- read and understand publications in the five key agrarian sociology journals
Activities:
- lectures and tutorials providing an empirical, theoretical and methodological background;
- practicals to practice the analysis of data bases in groups and write a concise report on the findings;
- excursion to a nearby farm;
- self-study.
Examination:
- group assignment (30%);
- written exam with open questions (70%).
To pass the written exam requires a minimum mark of 5.50.
Literature:
Van der Ploeg, J. D. (2013) Peasants and the art of farming. A Chayanovian manifesto, Nova Scotia: Fernwood Publishers. Available as e-book via WUR Library: dx.doi.org/10.3362/9781780448763.
Other literature will be made available at the Blackboard course site.
Programme | Phase | Specialization | Period | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Compulsory for: | BIN | International Development Studies | BSc | A: Sociology of Development | 5AF |
Restricted Optional for: | MOA | Organic Agriculture | MSc | B: Sustainable Food Systems | 5AF |