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The social reproduction of agrarian change: Feminist political economy and rural transformations in the global south. An introduction

Mezzadri, Alessandra; Stevano, Sara; Ossome, Lyn; Bargawi, Hannah

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Authors

Lyn Ossome



Abstract

The last decade has seen a renaissance of feminist political economy studies centred on the concept of ‘social reproduction’. These aim at studying global capitalism from the vantage‐point of what produces and sustains life, expanding the social boundaries of processes and subjects analysed in political economy. Contributing to this research agenda, the special issue we present in this Introduction explores the Social Reproduction of Agrarian Change. Building on the contributions comprising this collection, we argue that the study of agrarian change through social reproduction enables us to de‐invisibilise processes of life‐making behind agrarian transformations in three distinct ways. First, the lens of social reproduction enables us to better grasp the regeneration of ‘classes of labour’ in rural areas; gender processes of de‐agrarianisation and their implications for livelihoods; and centre reproductive labour within and beyond the household ‐ across spaces and temporalities ‐ as central to life in the countryside. Secondly, this lens also allows us to complicate the land question beyond productivist readings, explore its significance for life in rural settings, and multiply the agrarian questions of our times, whose histories and trajectories must grapple with debates on economic justice. Finally, the study of the social reproduction of agrarian change also provides us with a novel vantage point to read the formation and reorganisation of complex global geographies of the rural, their relation to crises of social reproduction and the ability to redraw the urban–rural divide. All contributions in this issue insightfully advance debates on methods in social reproduction analysis. The study of the agrarian lifeworlds analysed here also contributes significantly to social reproduction debates. It challenges rigid dichotomies between the ‘productive’ and ‘reproductive’. It problematises the households as a unit of analysis and sets land as central to planetary debates on crises of social reproduction and their resolution.

Citation

Mezzadri, A., Stevano, S., Ossome, L., & Bargawi, H. (2024). The social reproduction of agrarian change: Feminist political economy and rural transformations in the global south. An introduction. Journal of Agrarian Change, 24(3), Article e12595. https://doi.org/10.1111/joac.12595

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 1, 2024
Online Publication Date Jun 1, 2024
Publication Date Jul 2, 2024
Deposit Date Jul 6, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jul 6, 2024
Journal Journal of Agrarian Change
Print ISSN 1471-0358
Electronic ISSN 1471-0366
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 24
Issue 3
Article Number e12595
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/joac.12595
Keywords Social Reproduction, Gender, Feminist Economics, Global South, Theory
Publisher URL https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/joac.12595

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