“It is not unusual to find rural households in Thailand where land is no longer worked; where the thread of farming knowledge between the generations has been broken; where young man and women live away from home but entrust their children to their grandparents; where sons and daughters are registered as resident in one place but live in another; where villages surrounded by rice lands are supported and sustained by income from factory work; and where the buffalo is memory. There is a deep sense that the pace and character of change in the Asian countryside is such that scholars are playing theoretical and explanatory catch-up, while governments are attempting to manage a process that they do not fully appreciate, rarely understand and, often, do not particularly like.”
Jonathan Rigg “Where in the world is the rural” in: A. Amin and M. O'Neill: Thinking about almost everything, Durham University / Profile books, 2009
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