Arthur Johnson Memorial Library

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Political ecologies of cattle ranching in northern Mexico :

by Perramond, Eric
Series: Society, environment, and place Published by : University of Arizona Press (Tucson ) Physical details: xvi, 259 p. ill., maps ; 24 cm. ISBN:9780816527212 (hard cover); 0816527210 (hard cover). Year: 2010
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Item type Current location Call number Status Date due Barcode
sw 300 - 399 338.176213097217 Per (Browse shelf) Available 95473

The secret geographies of Mexican cattle ranching -- The development of cattle ranching in Sonora, Mexico -- Land, labor, and resource management on private ranches -- Ranch ecology, landscape change, and power -- Gender, community, and the spatial dynamics of ranching -- Private, communal, and privatizing ranches in neo-liberal Mexico -- Trail's end : ranching a continent.

"In this study of the Rio Sonora region of northern Mexico, where ranchers own anywhere from several hundred to tens of thousands of acres, Eric Perramond evaluates management techniques, labor expenditures, gender roles, and decision making on private ranches of varying size. By examining the economic and ecological dimensions of daily decisions made on and off the ranch, he shows that, contrary to prevailing notions, ranchers rarely collude as a class unless land titles are at issue and that their decision making is as varied as the landscapes they oversee." "Through first-hand observation, field measurements, and intimate ethnographies, Perramond sheds light on a complex set of decisions made, avoided, and confronted by these land managers and their families. In particular he shows that ranching has endured because of its extended kinship network, its reliance on all household members, and its close ties to local politics." "Perramond follows ranchers caught between debt

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