There has been considerable controversy amongst social and economic
historians, anthropologists, economists, sociologists, political
scientists and other specialists concerning the nature and structure of
Latin American agrarian society. An increasing number of studies have
come to challenge the traditionally accepted view that the backwardness
of rural Latin America and its resistance to 'modernisation' are due to
the persistence of feudal or non-feudal forms of social and economic
organisation. Instead attention has shifted to an examination of the
social and economic dislocations resulting from attempts to impose
capitalist forms of agrarian enterprise on peasant or pre-capitalist
societies. This book of essays by an international group of scholars
represents a substantial empirical contribution to the ongoing debate.
This book will be of interest not only to specialists in the field, but
also to anyone wishing to understand the historical processes underlying
contemporary Latin America's complex land tenure and rural employment
problems.