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Cover image for Land and longhouse : agrarian transformation in the uplands of sarawak
Title:
Land and longhouse : agrarian transformation in the uplands of sarawak
Personal Author:
Series:
Nordic Institute of Asian Studies monograph series ; 110
Publication Information:
Denmark : NIAS, 2007
Physical Description:
xxii, 422 p. : ill., maps, ports. ; 23 cm
ISBN:
9788776940102

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30000010202827 HC445.5 C72 2007 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Land and Longhouse examines the role of community, market, and state in the historic transformation of upland livelihoods in Southeast Asia. Focusing on the Saribas Iban of Sarawak, the book combines in-depth, generation-long village case studies with an account of changes in land use and tenure at the regional level spanning a century and a half. This analysis demonstrates that, far from being passive victims of globalization, the Iban have been active agents in their own transformation, engaging with both market and state while retaining community values and governance. R. A. Cramb makes a significant new contribution to debates about economic, social, and environmental change and conflict in upland Southeast Asia. His book offers a fascinating, empirically rich account of interest to scholars, development practitioners, and the general reader alike.

"This study is certain to become a major reference point for future work on land use, tenure, and agrarian change in Upland Southeast Asia." --Clifford Sather, Univer­sity of Helsinki

"Rob Cramb has written an excellent book with a much needed longitudinal perspective on agrarian change. The book is an important contribution to the urgent need for understanding the dynamics and consequences--both environmental and social--of upland transformation in Southeast Asia." --Ole Mertz, University of Copenhagen

"Rob Cramb's study raises provocative questions about Iban society, the nature of the Southeast Asia uplands, and agrarian history. He presents a work distinguished by the depth of its scholarship and the breadth of the questions addressed by it." --Michael R. Dove, Yale University


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