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@article{ Klooster2005,
 title = {Producing social nature in the Mexican countryside},
 author = {Klooster, Daniel J.},
 journal = {Cultural Geographies},
 number = {3},
 pages = {321-344},
 volume = {12},
 year = {2005},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1191/1474474005eu334oa},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-232469},
 abstract = {In most countries in Latin America, rural areas remain as populated as, or more                populated than, in 1950. People continue to live in rural areas despite the                declining economic viability of agriculture and the availability of work elsewhere.                Through an application of the production of nature argument, enriched by explicit                attention to the production of culture and the agency of nature, I attempt to                resolve that apparent paradox. In a case study illustrating the argument,                agriculture has declined in importance over several decades, while craft production                and temporary, cyclical emigration has increased. Remaining agricultural activities                and craft production utilize natural stocks and processes through the application of                family labour, with minimal recourse to a money economy. Cyclical emigration and                remittances from relatives also support the economic maintenance of rural lives.                Together, these activities permit the social reproduction of households that send                members to find work elsewhere. At the scale of North America, therefore, Mexican                nature subsidizes the cheap reproduction of labourers working in cities and                commercial agriculture in both Mexico and the United States. At the scale of the                village, nature enables people to cobble together livelihoods that support                households and villages. But more fundamentally, people produce culture through                everyday activities of production and consumption; and so nature provides the                necessary context for the productive activities that define and give meaning to what                households and village communities are, and what it means to be an individual member.},
}