Culture of Tobacco: An Ethnographic Enquiry into the Socio-Economic Mobility of Dalits of Rural India

· Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Ebook
230
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

Despite the global outcry against the harmful effects of tobacco products, this crop continues to thrive and has become a major source of income for all associated with its production process. This book presents an informative perspective on the impact of tobacco cultivation on the socio-economic fabric of rural Andhra Pradesh. The adoption of commercial crops has created phenomenal opportunities for millions and changed traditional social relationships. Tobacco cultivation differs from that of other cash crops in the sense that it is more labour-intensive, provides higher wages and, due to the multifarious activities involved in the tobacco industry, assures farm labourers of almost round-the-year employment in some form or another.

This book explains the reasons for socio-economic disparities between two villages using a comparative method. In one of the villages studied, tobacco is being extensively cultivated and its effect on the socio-economic fabric is clearly visible. In the other village, there is hardly any tobacco cultivation and the quality of life of the residents, in terms of material prosperity, educational levels of the children and political empowerment, is no match to that of their counterparts residing in the other village. The villages are almost equal in area, have agriculture as their main economic activity and persons of almost the same castes reside in both.

Today, one can still find cases of prosperity, surrounded by deserts of neglect, deprivation and destitution. The task of ensuring a better deal to struggling farmers is indeed challenging, but certainly not impossible. Thus, the book should prompt concerned decision makers to re-examine agricultural policy, both at the national and state levels, so that farmers have an assumed source of income throughout the year, their genuine grievances are properly heard and addressed, and they are saved from falling into financial difficulty.

The book is interdisciplinary in nature and will be useful to scholars, practitioners, policy makers and students of anthropology, sociology, economics, rural and agrarian studies, regional and area studies, gender studies and development studies.

About the author

Chikkala Kranthi Kumar obtained his doctoral degree in Anthropology in 2011 from the Department of Anthropology, University of Hyderabad, India. He is associated with the Centre for Equity and Social Development (CESD), National Institute of Rural Development (NIRD), Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India, and is involved with a number of projects related to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. Chikkala has published papers in the Journal of Asian and African Studies (JAAS) and contributed chapters to various edited volumes. He has presented several research papers in national and international conferences and participated in the World Congress of International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences (IUAES) during 2009 in China. He is actively engaged with the social issues and development activities of Dalits and marginalised communities of South India.

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