
This book has a deal purpose: to study the changing social relations in a region of Costa Rica that does not conform to the country's accepted image as an 'agrarian democracy, ' and to investigate why latifundios (large unproductive or underutilized estates) still dominate so much of the Latin American countryside. Many social scientists - anthropologists, historians, economists, and political scientists alike - have long suggested that latifundios would disappear (indeed, are disappearing) with the development of markets and capital-intensive agriculture. By contrast, this book demonstrates that latifundios continue to exist, and even to spread, in a dynamic modern export economy. The 'logic' of the persistence of latifundios is linked to world market forces, environmental constraints, state subsidies, and the influence of powerful landowners on development policies. The author argues that early twentieth-century latifundismo in Coasta Rica was based in large part on speculation and a subsidy from nature in the form of timber and feral cattle, and that it also reflected the difficulty of increasing investment in the context of a weak state and a locally powerful peasantry
Page Count:
478
Publication Date:
1992-01-01
ISBN-10:
0804720444
ISBN-13:
9780804720441
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