Issue
Cah. Agric.
Volume 31, 2022
Le foncier irrigué : enjeux et perspectives pour un développement durable / Irrigated Land Tenure: Challenges and Opportunities for Sustainable Development. Coordonnateurs : Jean-Philippe Venot, Ali Daoudi, Sidy Seck, Amandine Hertzog Adamczewski
Article Number 8
Number of page(s) 9
DOI https://doi.org/10.1051/cagri/2022004
Published online 14 March 2022
  • Bruneau M. 2012. Agrarian transitions in northern Thailand: from periurban to mountain margins 1966–2006. In: Rigg J, Vandergeest P, eds. Revisiting rural places: pathways to poverty and prosperity in Southeast Asia. Honolulu (Hawai): University of Hawai’i Press, pp. 38–51. [Google Scholar]
  • Dayley R, Sattayanurak A. 2016. Thailand’s last peasant. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 47(1): 42–65. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022463415000478. [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Floch P, Molle F. 2007. Marshalling water resources: a chronology of irrigation development in the Chi-Mun river basin, Northeast Thailand. IRD/M-Power/IWMI Working paper, 57 p. [2021/11/21]. https://horizon.documentation.ird.fr/exl-doc/pleins_textes/divers11-03/010044930.pdf. [Google Scholar]
  • Formoso B, éd. 1997. Terroir et structure foncière. In: Formoso B, ed. Ban Amphawan et Ban Han. Le devenir de deux villages rizicoles du Nord-Est thaïlandais. Paris (France): ERC/CNRS, pp. 215–237. [Google Scholar]
  • Formoso B. 2016. Are Thai peasants still farmers? The socioeconomic transformation of two villages of northeastern Thailand. Moussons 28(2): 39–60. https://doi.org/10.4000/moussons.3636. [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Formoso B. 2018. La dette des agriculteurs passée au crible. Le cas de deux villages du nord-est de la Thaïlande. Études rurales 202: 140–157. https://doi.org/10.4000/etudesrurales.15077. [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Formoso B. 1997. Ban Amphawan et Ban Han. Le devenir de deux villages rizicoles du Nord-Est thaïlandais. Paris (France): ERC/CNRS, 754 p. [Google Scholar]
  • Hirsch P. 2012. Nong Nae revisited: continuity and change in a post-frontier community. In: Rigg J, Vandergeest P, eds. Revisiting rural places: pathways to poverty and prosperity in Southeast Asia. Honolulu (Hawai): University of Hawai’i Press, pp. 112–134. [Google Scholar]
  • Ingram JC. 1971. Economic change in Thailand, 1850–1970. Stanford (UK): Stanford University Press, 364 p. [Google Scholar]
  • Keyes C. 2014. Finding their voice. Northeastern villagers and the Thai state. Chiang Mai (Thailand): Silkworm Books, 262 p. https://doi.org/10.1355/sj29-3i. [Google Scholar]
  • National Statistical Office of Thailand. 2013. Advanced Report 2013, Agricultural Census. Bangkok: National Statistical Office. [2021/02/21]. web.nso.go.th/en/survey/200260summary_Jan_2017.pdf. [Google Scholar]
  • National Statistical Office of Thailand. 2014. Statistical Yearbook Thailand 2014. Bangkok: National Statistical Office. [2021/07/20]. Statistical Yearbook Thailand 2014. nso.go.th. [Google Scholar]
  • Podhisita C. 2017. Household dynamics, the capitalist economy, and agricultural change in rural Thailand. Southeast Asian Studies 6(2): 247–273. [Google Scholar]
  • Pongsapich A, Amyot J, Fuhs W. 1976. Village Khon Kaen. Social and economic conditions of a rural population in northeastern Thailand. Bangkok: Chulalongkorn University Social Research Institute, 244 p. [Google Scholar]
  • Popkin S. 1979. The rational peasant. The political economy of rural society in Vietnam. Berkeley (USA): The University of California Press, 332 p. https://doi.org/10.1525/9780520341623. [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Rambo T. 2017. The agrarian transformation in northeastern Thailand: a review of recent research. Southeast Asian Studies 6(2): 211–245. [Google Scholar]
  • Rigg J. 1993. Rice, water and land: strategies of cultivation on the Khorat plateau, Thailand. South East Asia Research 1(2): 197–221. https://doi.org/10.1177/0967828x9300100205. [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Rigg J. 2019. More than rural. Textures of Thailand’s agrarian transformation. Honolulu (Hawai): University of Hawai’i Press, 324 p. https://doi.org/10.1515/9780824877743. [Google Scholar]
  • Rigg J, Salamanca A. 2012. Moving lives in Northeast Thailand: household mobility transformations and the village, 1982–2009. In: Rigg J, Vandergeest P, eds. Revisiting rural places: pathways to poverty and prosperity in Southeast Asia. Honolulu (Hawai): University of Hawai’i Press, pp. 88–111. [Google Scholar]
  • Scott JC. 1976. The moral economy of the peasant. Rebellion and subsistence in Southeast Asia. New Haven (USA): Yale University Press, 246 p. https://doi.org/10.5771/0506-7286-1978-2-246. [Google Scholar]
  • Vandergeest P, Rigg J. 2012. The restudy “problem” and agrarian change in Southeast Asia. In: Rigg J, Vandergeest P, eds. Revisiting rural places: pathways to poverty and prosperity in Southeast Asia. Honolulu (Hawai): University of Hawai’i Press, pp. 1–24. [Google Scholar]
  • Walker A. 2012. Thailand’s political peasants. Power in the modern rural economy. Madison (USA): The University of Wisconsin Press, 276 p. [Google Scholar]
  • Walker A. 2015. From legibility to eligibility, subsidy and productivity in rural Asia. TRaNS 2(1): 45–71. https://doi.org/10.1017/trn.2014.17. [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
  • Wilson G, Rigg J. 2003. “Post-productivist” agricultural regimes and the South: discordant concepts. Progress in Human Geography 27(6): 681–707. https://doi.org/10.1191/0309132503ph450oa. [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

Current usage metrics show cumulative count of Article Views (full-text article views including HTML views, PDF and ePub downloads, according to the available data) and Abstracts Views on Vision4Press platform.

Data correspond to usage on the plateform after 2015. The current usage metrics is available 48-96 hours after online publication and is updated daily on week days.

Initial download of the metrics may take a while.