Structure, agency, and strategy among tenants in India

This paper arises from the Global Poverty Research Group (www.gprg.org), under which I have conducted fieldwork in rural south India. My focus is on strategies, choice, and constraints as aspects of tenants' decisions. My aim is to treat tenants (as both households and as individual agents) i...

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Main Author: Olsen, W
Format: Working paper
Published: University of Oxford 2007
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author Olsen, W
author_facet Olsen, W
author_sort Olsen, W
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description This paper arises from the Global Poverty Research Group (www.gprg.org), under which I have conducted fieldwork in rural south India. My focus is on strategies, choice, and constraints as aspects of tenants' decisions. My aim is to treat tenants (as both households and as individual agents) in their structural contexts (class, caste, religion, gender).The strategies that people use involve an orientation to current and future events, including possible events which are imagined or which could happen. This orientation creates a context for immediate decision-making as well as a context for reflection and deliberation. The strategies of tenants include being friendly toward landlords but making this conditional upon their proper behaviour; the renegotiation of work; switching from land management to livestock; choosing to rent rainfed land or irrigated land; and so on. Agents negotiate and enforce proper behaviour and thus both create and change the system of norms that exists. In Macintyre's terms (1985), the virtues intrinsic to the socio-economic practices are continually being re-worked. In the paper, I reframe this in dynamic structure-agency terms. Both structural relationships and concrete past incidents act as reference points for decisions made today in a given relationship.The strategy of a household is an emergent property of the household as an agent, and includes detailed first-order strategies along with more reflective second-order strategies which reconcile goals in the education, migration, and marriage domains with assumptions - and explicit strategies - about domestic and paid labour. The paper is thus interdisciplinary and links together several schools of thought.
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spelling oxford-uuid:1021b369-cc1b-4513-af10-b66417e773242022-03-26T09:54:52ZStructure, agency, and strategy among tenants in IndiaWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:1021b369-cc1b-4513-af10-b66417e77324Bulk import via SwordSymplectic ElementsUniversity of Oxford2007Olsen, WThis paper arises from the Global Poverty Research Group (www.gprg.org), under which I have conducted fieldwork in rural south India. My focus is on strategies, choice, and constraints as aspects of tenants' decisions. My aim is to treat tenants (as both households and as individual agents) in their structural contexts (class, caste, religion, gender).The strategies that people use involve an orientation to current and future events, including possible events which are imagined or which could happen. This orientation creates a context for immediate decision-making as well as a context for reflection and deliberation. The strategies of tenants include being friendly toward landlords but making this conditional upon their proper behaviour; the renegotiation of work; switching from land management to livestock; choosing to rent rainfed land or irrigated land; and so on. Agents negotiate and enforce proper behaviour and thus both create and change the system of norms that exists. In Macintyre's terms (1985), the virtues intrinsic to the socio-economic practices are continually being re-worked. In the paper, I reframe this in dynamic structure-agency terms. Both structural relationships and concrete past incidents act as reference points for decisions made today in a given relationship.The strategy of a household is an emergent property of the household as an agent, and includes detailed first-order strategies along with more reflective second-order strategies which reconcile goals in the education, migration, and marriage domains with assumptions - and explicit strategies - about domestic and paid labour. The paper is thus interdisciplinary and links together several schools of thought.
spellingShingle Olsen, W
Structure, agency, and strategy among tenants in India
title Structure, agency, and strategy among tenants in India
title_full Structure, agency, and strategy among tenants in India
title_fullStr Structure, agency, and strategy among tenants in India
title_full_unstemmed Structure, agency, and strategy among tenants in India
title_short Structure, agency, and strategy among tenants in India
title_sort structure agency and strategy among tenants in india
work_keys_str_mv AT olsenw structureagencyandstrategyamongtenantsinindia