Subjects

Livelihood Diversification and Landlessness in Rural Bangladesh

Rie Makita, The University Press Ltd, 2007, xxii, 326 p, tables, figs, ISBN : 984051783X, $33.00 (Includes free airmail shipping)

Contents: 1. Introduction. 2. The landless as the poorest category of rural population. 3. The landless and the rural non-farm sector. 4. The design of empirical research. 5. The setting of the case study. 6. What is the sponsored non-farm sector? 7. The sponsored non-farm sector as a means of livelihood diversification. 8. The sponsored non-farm sector in the rural economy. Conclusion. Appendices. Bibliography. Index.

"This book explores how the landless poor, excluded from land-based agricultural development, can open up an opportunity to get out of poverty in the rural economy.

The book identifies a gap between the growth and poverty-reduction dimensions of non-land-based rural development. The former is directed towards the non-poor; the latter is open to the landless poor. The poverty-reduction dimension is effective in reducing poverty but is not sufficient to help the landless escape from poverty. It is therefore necessary to bridge the gap and guide the remaining poor to the threshold of growth dimension. This transitional process is interpreted as livelihood diversification from survival to accumulation. It is an attempt to provide a new viewpoint for the livelihoods framework in which livelihood diversification has been analysed as a process for survival or accumulation.

As an instrument of the bridging strategy, the book proposes the creation of a sponsored non-farm sector in the rural economy, or the creation of a partnership enterprise by landless producers and a sponsor, through a sub-contract. This theoretical concept is examined empirically through three income-generating programmes implemented for the landless poor by a Bangladesh NGO. The programmes in poultry rearing, pond fishery and silk production are described as partnership enterprises, in which the NGO is the sponsor, and programme participants are partner-producers. An analysis of primary data collected in North-western Bangladesh clarifies the role which the sponsored non-farm sector plays in diversifying the livelihoods of the landless poor for upward mobility." (jacket)

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