Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-lj6df Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-15T01:41:04.235Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Socioeconomic Differentiation among Small Cultivators on Paraguay's Eastern Frontier

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 October 2022

Beverly Y. Nagel*
Affiliation:
Carleton College
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Until the 1970s, Paraguay's eastern frontier was known primarily for its vast virgin forests and its domination by semifeudal enterprises engaged in extracting yerba maté and timber. After the 1970s, however, the extension of transportation networks, construction of the massive binational Itaipú hydroelectric works, and the release of state lands for private purchase paved the way for large-scale in-migration, settlement, and transformation of the region into a zone for commercial agriculture. In less than two decades, the rapid expansion of soybean production into this area has catapulted Paraguay into the ranks of the world's major exporters of soybeans.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1991 by the University of Texas Press

Footnotes

*

This research was supported by a fellowship from the Tinker Foundation. I would like to thank the staff and members of the Centro Paraguayo de Estudios Sociológicos and of PAC/ASAGRAPA (Programa de Ayuda Cristiana/Asociación de Agricultores de Alto Paraná), especially Dr. Domingo Rivarola, Pastor F. Westerman, and Miguel Lezcano, for their generous advice and assistance during my fieldwork in Paraguay. I also wish to thank several anonymous LAR reviewers for their thoughtful suggestions on an earlier draft. The opinions expressed here are those of the author.

References

Alegre, Heriberto 1977La colonización en el Paraguay: el Eje Este.” Revista Paraguaya de Sociología, no. 38 (Jan.–Apr.):135–55.Google Scholar
Archetti, Eduardo, and Stolen, Kristi Anne 1975 Explotación familiar y acumulación de capital en el campo argentino. Buenos Aires: Siglo Veintiuno.Google Scholar
Baer, Werner, and Birch, Melissa 1984Expansion of the Economic Frontier: Paraguayan Growth in the 1970s.” World Development 12, no. 8:783–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Campos, Luis. A. 1986Situación y perspectivas de los pequeños productores agrícolas de la colonia Pirapey (Itapúa).” In Pequeños campesinos y su incertidumbre, edited by Campos, Luis A., Nikiphoroff, B., and Rodríguez Silvero, R., 2195. Asunción: El Lector.Google Scholar
Campos, Daniel 1987White Gold in Paraguay: Socioeconomic Change and Technological Transformation through Cotton Production.” Ph.D. diss., University of Wisconsin.Google Scholar
DGEC (DIRECCION GENERAL DE ESTADISITICAS Y CENSOS) 1986 Censo nacional de población y viviendas, 1982. Vol. 2. Asunción: DGEC.Google Scholar
Fogel, Ramon 1974La medición del ingreso en unidades agrícolas de subsistencia en el Paraguay: resultados de un ensayo metodológico.” Revista Paraguaya de Sociología, no. 31 (Sept.–Dec.):121–65.Google Scholar
DGEC (DIRECCION GENERAL DE ESTADISITICAS Y CENSOS) 1982Colonización y estructura agraria.” In Estado, campesinos y modernización agrícola, edited by Rivarola, Domingo, 219–96. Asunción: Centro Paraguayo de Estudios Sociológicos.Google Scholar
Foweraker, Joe 1981 The Struggle for Land: A Political Economy of the Pioneer Frontier in Brazil from 1930 to the Present Day. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hay, James Eston 1982Conflict and Convivencia: A German-Brazilian Frontier Town in Eastern Paraguay.” M. A. thesis, University of Kansas.Google Scholar
Katzman, Martin T. 1976Paradoxes of Amazonian Development in a ‘Resource-Starved’ World.” Journal of Developing Areas 10, no. 4:445–60.Google Scholar
Kleinpenning, J. M. G. 1984Rural Development Policy in Paraguay since 1960.” Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie 75, no. 3:164–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kohlhepp, Gerd 1983Problems of Dependent Regional Development in Eastern Paraguay.” Applied Geography and Development 22:745.Google Scholar
Laino, Domingo 1977 Paraguay: fronteras y penetración brasileña. Asunción: Cerro Cora.Google Scholar
Llambi, Luis 1988Small Modern Farmers: Neither Peasants nor Full-Fledged Capitalists?Journal of Peasant Studies 15, no. 3:350–72.Google Scholar
MAG (MINISTERIO DE AGRICULTURA Y GANADERIA) 1985 Censo Agropecuario 1981. Asunción: MAG.Google Scholar
Margolis, Maxine 1973 The Moving Frontier. Gainesville: University of Florida Press. 1977 “Historical Perspectives on Frontier Agriculture as an Adaptive Strategy.” American Ethnologist 4, no. 1:42–64.Google Scholar
Martinez Cuevas, Efrain 1984 Los eslabones del oro blanco: la historia del algodón en el Paraguay. Asunción: La Rural Ediciones.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, Claude 1983The Economic Bases of Demographic Reproduction: From the Domestic Mode of Production to Wage-Earning.” Journal of Peasant Studies 11, no. 1:5061.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Molinas Vega, Jose Ramon 1987Las transferencias de valor de las explotaciones campesinas algodoneras a los centros urbanos en Paraguay (1985–1986).” In Economía Paraguaya 1986, Tomo 1, Análisis y debates, edited by the Centro Paraguayo de Estudios Sociológicos, 235–53. Asunción: Centro Paraguayo de Estudios Sociológicos.Google Scholar
Moran, Emilio 1981 Developing the Amazon. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Nickson, R. Andrew 1981Brazilian Colonization of the Eastern Border Region of Paraguay.” Journal of Latin American Studies 13, pt. 1:111–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palau, Tomas, Fogel, Ramon, and Heikel, M. Victoria 1986 El cultivo del algodón y la soja en el Paraguay y sus derivaciones sociales. Santiago, Chile: CEPAL.Google Scholar
Palau, Tomas, and Heikel, M. Victoria 1987 Los campesinos, el estado y las empresas en la frontera agrícola. Asunción: BASE/PISPAL.Google Scholar
Portes, Alejandro 1978Migration and Underdevelopment.” Politics and Society 8, no 1:148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rivarola, Domingo 1982Estado, modernización agrícola y diferenciación campesina en el Paraguay.” In Estado, campesinos y modernización agrícola, edited by Rivarola, Domingo, 2196. Asunción: Centro Paraguayo de Estudios Sociológicos.Google Scholar
Roberts, Bryan 1978 Cities of Peasants: The Political Economy of Urbanization in the Third World. Beverly Hills, Calif.: Sage.Google Scholar
Roseberry, William 1988Political Economy.” Annual Review of Anthropology 17:161–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, John F., Hayes, James D., and Margolis, Maxine L. 1989The Binational Frontier of Eastern Paraguay.” In The Human Ecology of Tropical Land Settlement in Latin America, edited by Schumann, Debra A. and Partridge, William L., 199237. Boulder, Colo.: Westview.Google Scholar
Wood, Charles H. 1983Peasant and Capitalist Production in the Brazilian Amazon: A Conceptual Framework for the Study of Frontier Expansion.” In The Dilemma of Amazonian Development, edited by Morán, Emilio, 259–78. Boulder, Colo.: Westview.Google Scholar
Wood, Charles H., and Schmink, Marianne 1979Blaming the Victim: Small Farmer Production in an Amazonian Colonization Project.” Studies in Third World Societies 7:7793.Google Scholar
WORLD BANK 1978 Paraguay: Regional Development in Eastern Paraguay. Washington, D.C.: World Bank.Google Scholar
Zarza, Olga M. 1988Las ocupaciones de tierras en Paraguay: el lado oscuro de la propiedad privada.” Revista Paraguaya de Sociología, no. 71 (Jan.–Apr.):8196.Google Scholar
Ziche, Joachim 1979El desarrollo de la situación socio-económica de los colonos en el Eje Norte de colonización, Paraguay.” Revista Paraguaya de Sociología, no. 45 (May–Aug.):3756.Google Scholar