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Kofyar cash-cropping: Choice and change in indigenous agricultural development
Authors:Robert M. Netting  M. Priscilla Stone  Glenn D. Stone
Affiliation:(1) Department of Anthropology, The University of Arizona, 85721 Tucson, Arizona;(2) Social Science Research Council, 605 Third Avenue, 10158 New York, New York;(3) Department of Anthropology, Columbia University, 10027 New York, New York
Abstract:Amid discussions of an agricultural crisis and the failure of largescale, mechanized, capitalintensive development schemes in Nigeria, the Kofyar of Plateau State provide a case study of farmers spontaneously expanding food crop production for the market, using indigenous lowenergy technology. Temporary, followed by permanent, migration from the Jos Plateau homeland to frontier settlements on the fertile Benue plains has been accompanied by a change from initial shifting cultivation in forest clearings to permanent, intensively tilled and fertilized homestead fields. Labor is organized primarily in households that have grown in size and complexity. Cooperative and exchange work groups are also important for meeting seasonal bottlenecks and providing the careful, disciplined cultivation that intensive agriculture requires. Kofyar now devote up to 50% of their labor to cash crops, and they purchase considerable quantities of manufactured goods and medical services. Their uncoerced adaptation to an environment of new land resources and market incentives suggests both the advantages of indigenous development with a minimum of state control or interference and the limitations of a conventional dependency theory perspective.
Keywords:cash-cropping  indigenous development  migration  agricultural labor  households  work groups  Nigeria
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