Asian Smallholders in Comparative Perspective provides the first multicountry, inter-disciplinary analysis of the single most important social and economic formation in the Asian countryside: the smallholder. Based on ten core country chapters, the volume describes and explains the persistence, transformations, functioning and future of the smallholder and smallholdings across East and Southeast Asia. As well as providing a source book for scholars working on agrarian change in the region, it also engages with a number of key current areas of debate, including: the nature and direction of the agrarian transition in Asia, and its distinctiveness vis à vis transitions in the global North; the persistence of the smallholder notwithstanding deep and rapid structural change; and the question of the efficiency and productivity of smallholder-based farming set against concerns over global and national food security.
Contributions by: Eric Thompson, Jonathan Rigg, Jamie Gillen, Edo Andriesse, Robert Cole, Po-Yi Hung, Ibrahim Ngah, Khairul Hisyam Kamarudin, Tuan Anh Nguyen, Chivoin Peou, Gen Shoji, Outhai Soukkhy, Tubtim Tubtim, Sakunika Wewalaarachchi, Holi Bina Wijaya, Satoshi Yokoyama, Kunimitsu Yoshida, Sokphea Young