L'or blanc petits et grands planteurs face au "boom" de l'hévéaculture (Viêt Nam-Cambodge sous la direction de Frédéric Fortunel et Christopher Gironde.
Material type: TextSeries: Carnet de l'Irasec / Occasional paper ; no. 24.Publication details: Bangkok, Thailand IRASEC 2014.ISBN:- 9786167571201
- 633.89520959 FOR
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | Center for Khmer Studies | LC SEAS Collection | 633.89520959 FOR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 10330 |
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 173-190
The central highlands of Vietnam and Cambodia have witnessed a significant increase of rubber tree plantations over the last 10 years and a profound reorganization of its economy and territory. The rubber booms differ significantly between the two countries, but they are also strongly intermingled in a context of increasing regional integration. The process is driven by global markets and powerful foreign actors such as China and Malaysia, but national governments do play a key role with respect to land access and land use change. 'White Gold' and new eldorados are not only an economic issue; what is at stake is also political influence and power relations within the Greater-Mekong sub-region, as illustrated by massive transnational large-scale land acquisitions. To better understand the current agrarian transition, the authors of this book have sought to provide its historical background, back to colonial and socialist-experience times. The books also analyses the capacity of local populations to resist to new comers in search for land, and the sustainability of family-based low-input labour-intensive livelihoods that are evidently threatened by large-scale, high-input and mechanized production systems.
Francais
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