Enacting peasant moral community economies for sustainable livelihoods: A case of women-led cooperatives in rural Mexico
•The framework Peasant moral community economies draws on community economies, household moral economy and peasant moral economy.•This framework well captures relevant moral dimensions of collective action.•The moral economies it found were contradictory: we saw both gender transformations and incre...
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Veröffentlicht in: | World development 2019-03, Vol.115, p.120-131 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •The framework Peasant moral community economies draws on community economies, household moral economy and peasant moral economy.•This framework well captures relevant moral dimensions of collective action.•The moral economies it found were contradictory: we saw both gender transformations and increased women’s time poverty.•Gender transformations and time poverty both predict the durability of women’s cooperatives and reinforce female altruism.•Support for women’s efforts for sustainable livelihoods may be improved by recognizing contradictory moral economies, gender and time poverty.
The Mexican state has promoted women’s group-based income-generating projects for nearly three decades. Although most state-supported income-generating projects discontinue after external funding ends, some continue to operate. While existing studies have highlighted several reasons for dis-/continuation, none have focused on the role of moral obligations in shaping women’s everyday livelihood practices and few have closely examined context dependent external factors. In order to provide more effective support for women’s collective efforts to strengthen sustainable livelihoods, we developed the framework peasant moral community economies. This framework draws on that of household moral economy, community economies and peasant moral economy as informed by feminist scholars’ recognition of gender as process. Through our framework we investigated how intra-group dynamics and groups’ relationships within their members’ households and communities in their own specific environments shape group operations through examination of three initially state-funded women only but now long-running women-led cooperatives in rural Hidalgo, Mexico. Data was collected through surveys, focus group discussions, and in-depth interviews with cooperative members, their families and community authorities supplemented by secondary literature review and observation. We found that context specific manifestations of reciprocity and the right to subsistence were common to both household and community arrangements. While context specific manifestations of these moral principles enabled new gendered subjectivities that contributed to gender transformations and livelihood production, we also found that the same principles reinforced female altruism and exacerbated women’s time poverty. The framework of peasant moral community economies allowed us to see how both contradictory gender transformations and time |
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ISSN: | 0305-750X 1873-5991 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.worlddev.2018.11.005 |