Land, labour, and the agency of cultivators: an economic history of smallholder durian cultivation in Peninsular Malaysia, 1970-2000
This historical study examines the overlooked role of smallholders in durian farming in Peninsular Malaysia from 1970 to 2000. Existing studies on durian history have neglected smallholders, focusing on anthropology, consumption culture, and cultivation from the perspective of large-scale plantation...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1743632024-03-30T16:56:05Z Land, labour, and the agency of cultivators: an economic history of smallholder durian cultivation in Peninsular Malaysia, 1970-2000 Tay, Jun Pin Koh Keng We School of Humanities kohkw@ntu.edu.sg Arts and Humanities Durian Agriculture history Peninsular Malaysia This historical study examines the overlooked role of smallholders in durian farming in Peninsular Malaysia from 1970 to 2000. Existing studies on durian history have neglected smallholders, focusing on anthropology, consumption culture, and cultivation from the perspective of large-scale plantations after 2000. This paper addresses this literature gap by privileging smallholders’ experiences, representing the bulk of durian cultivators before 2000. This research contextualises trends in durian cultivation hectarage, derived from durian land area data in national statistical sourcebooks, using broader political economy analysis to understand the impact of federal agricultural policies and global market dynamics. The study shows that the surge in durian hectarage from 1974 onwards resulted from federal crop diversification policies, reflecting state influence over smallholders. By the 1980s, many smallholders transitioned from oil palm and rubber to durian, motivated by more mature durian distribution channels, declining commodity prices of palm oil and rubber, and higher opportunity costs of agricultural labour due to industrialisation. Smallholder durian farming, requiring minimal maintenance except at harvest, suited the constrained family labour availability during that period. In addition to agriculture history, this research contributes to Malaysia’s broader developmental economic history by examining the smallholders’ changing survival strategies within broader political-economic developments. Bachelor's degree 2024-03-27T08:49:01Z 2024-03-27T08:49:01Z 2024 Final Year Project (FYP) Tay, J. P. (2024). Land, labour, and the agency of cultivators: an economic history of smallholder durian cultivation in Peninsular Malaysia, 1970-2000. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174363 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174363 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University |
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Arts and Humanities Durian Agriculture history Peninsular Malaysia Tay, Jun Pin Land, labour, and the agency of cultivators: an economic history of smallholder durian cultivation in Peninsular Malaysia, 1970-2000 |
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This historical study examines the overlooked role of smallholders in durian farming in Peninsular Malaysia from 1970 to 2000. Existing studies on durian history have neglected smallholders, focusing on anthropology, consumption culture, and cultivation from the perspective of large-scale plantations after 2000. This paper addresses this literature gap by privileging smallholders’ experiences, representing the bulk of durian cultivators before 2000. This research contextualises trends in durian cultivation hectarage, derived from durian land area data in national statistical sourcebooks, using broader political economy analysis to understand the impact of federal agricultural policies and global market dynamics. The study shows that the surge in durian hectarage from 1974 onwards resulted from federal crop diversification policies, reflecting state influence over smallholders. By the 1980s, many smallholders transitioned from oil palm and rubber to durian, motivated by more mature durian distribution channels, declining commodity prices of palm oil and rubber, and higher opportunity costs of agricultural labour due to industrialisation. Smallholder durian farming, requiring minimal maintenance except at harvest, suited the constrained family labour availability during that period. In addition to agriculture history, this research contributes to Malaysia’s broader developmental economic history by examining the smallholders’ changing survival strategies within broader political-economic developments. |
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Koh Keng We |
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Koh Keng We Tay, Jun Pin |
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Final Year Project |
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Tay, Jun Pin |
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Tay, Jun Pin |
title |
Land, labour, and the agency of cultivators: an economic history of smallholder durian cultivation in Peninsular Malaysia, 1970-2000 |
title_short |
Land, labour, and the agency of cultivators: an economic history of smallholder durian cultivation in Peninsular Malaysia, 1970-2000 |
title_full |
Land, labour, and the agency of cultivators: an economic history of smallholder durian cultivation in Peninsular Malaysia, 1970-2000 |
title_fullStr |
Land, labour, and the agency of cultivators: an economic history of smallholder durian cultivation in Peninsular Malaysia, 1970-2000 |
title_full_unstemmed |
Land, labour, and the agency of cultivators: an economic history of smallholder durian cultivation in Peninsular Malaysia, 1970-2000 |
title_sort |
land, labour, and the agency of cultivators: an economic history of smallholder durian cultivation in peninsular malaysia, 1970-2000 |
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Nanyang Technological University |
publishDate |
2024 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174363 |
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1795302126999568384 |