TY - JOUR
T1 - Transforming critical agrarian studies:
T2 - Solidarity, scholar-activism and emancipatory agendas in and from the Global South
AU - Aguiar, Diana
AU - Ahmed, Yasmin
AU - Avci, Duygu
AU - Bastos, Gabriel
AU - Batubara, Bosman
AU - Bejeno, Cynthia
AU - Camacho-Benavides, Claudia I.
AU - Chauhan, Komal
AU - Coronado, Sergio
AU - Das, Somashree
AU - Ejarque, Mercedes
AU - Benlisoy, Zeynep Ceren Eren
AU - Güiza-Gomez, Diana Isabel
AU - Gyapong, Adwoa Yeboah
AU - Phan, Hao Phuong
AU - Masters, Rahma Hassan
AU - Hernandez Rodriguez, Carol
AU - Ng, Huiying
AU - Hussain, Sardar Babur
AU - Kavak, Sinem
AU - Kelegama, Thiruni
AU - Kurien, Amit John
AU - Leung, Darren Shi-chi
AU - Martínez-Cruz, Tania
AU - Monjane, Boaventura
AU - Mudimu, George Tonderai
AU - Pelek, Deniz
AU - Ralandison, Tsilavo
AU - Varrotti, Andrea P. Sosa
AU - Torvikey, Dzifa
AU - Valencia-Duarte, Diana María
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - This paper examines the challenges and opportunities faced bycritical agrarian scholars in and from the Global South. We arguethat despite the historical and structural limitations, the criticaljuncture of convergence of crises and renewed interest inagrarian political economies offers an opportunity for fostering adiverse research agenda that opens space for critical perspectivesabout, from and by the Global South, which is mostly absent inmainstream scholarship dominated by the Global North. We alsopropose doing so by enhancing solidarity to transform injusticeswithin academia and other spaces of knowledge production anddissemination. To develop the argument,first, we reflect on themultiplicity of crises in rural areas and the changing character ofsocial struggles, as well as the interlinkages betweenenvironmental crises and the re-emergence of critical agrarianstudies that are reshaping the agrarian question. Then, we discussthe implications and conditions of the political agenda carriedout by a scholar-activist movement working on agrarian studiesfrom the Global South. Drawing on our experience as theCollective of Agrarian Scholar-Activists from the South (CASAS),we conclude by proposing three ways forward for enhancingsolidarity through networks of scholar-activists: knowledgeaccessibility, cooperative organization, and co-production ofknowledge
AB - This paper examines the challenges and opportunities faced bycritical agrarian scholars in and from the Global South. We arguethat despite the historical and structural limitations, the criticaljuncture of convergence of crises and renewed interest inagrarian political economies offers an opportunity for fostering adiverse research agenda that opens space for critical perspectivesabout, from and by the Global South, which is mostly absent inmainstream scholarship dominated by the Global North. We alsopropose doing so by enhancing solidarity to transform injusticeswithin academia and other spaces of knowledge production anddissemination. To develop the argument,first, we reflect on themultiplicity of crises in rural areas and the changing character ofsocial struggles, as well as the interlinkages betweenenvironmental crises and the re-emergence of critical agrarianstudies that are reshaping the agrarian question. Then, we discussthe implications and conditions of the political agenda carriedout by a scholar-activist movement working on agrarian studiesfrom the Global South. Drawing on our experience as theCollective of Agrarian Scholar-Activists from the South (CASAS),we conclude by proposing three ways forward for enhancingsolidarity through networks of scholar-activists: knowledgeaccessibility, cooperative organization, and co-production ofknowledge
KW - scholar-activism
KW - Global South
KW - knowledge politics
KW - academic inequalities
KW - critical agrarian studies
U2 - 10.1080/03066150.2023.2176759
DO - 10.1080/03066150.2023.2176759
M3 - Debate/Note/Editorial
SN - 0306-6150
VL - 50
SP - 758
EP - 786
JO - Journal of Peasant Studies
JF - Journal of Peasant Studies
IS - 2
ER -