The Dictionary of Human Geography

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building at the NIC seems to be of a piece with
this story-telling-cum-war-mongering geopol-
itical inventiveness, albeit announced instead
as a peace-loving geo-economic homage to
globalization. Elsewhere, though, the turn
away from reality in the name of Pax
Americanahas been widely criticized. With the
possible exception of fans ofnon-representa-
tional theory, geographers have stayed put as
denizens of a reality-based community that
acknowledges both the limits and possibilities
ofsituated knowledge. Thus rather than map
a futuristic scenario ofPax Americanafor 2020,
leaders in the field have instead charted the
violent destruction and dispossession that con-
stitutes Pox Americana on the ground in the
colonial present (Harvey, 2004b; Johnston,
2005d; Gregory and Pred, 2007; see also
Retort, 2005). And rather than counterpose
globalization and fear as opposites, critical
geographers have also explored the globaliza-
tion of fear that has followed from the unremit-
ting American pursuit of an informal and, as
such, exceptionalist empire that is founded on
ideas about peace and justice for all, but which
is always also foundering in human geographies


  • from slave plantations to export-processing
    zones to Guantanamo – where exceptions are
    made in the name of the exceptionalist vision
    (Miller, 2006; Mitchell and Rosati, 2006;
    Sparke, 2005, 2007; Wright, 1999b). A brand
    name for this tortured concoction of capital
    and coercion is only fitting:Pax Americana^1
    certain restrictions may apply. ms


peasant A term that was in common use in
theEnglishlanguagefromthefifteenthcentury,
referring to individuals working on the land and
residing in the countryside. By the nineteenth
century, ‘peasant’ was employed as a term of
abuse (e.g. by Marx on the idiocy of rural life),
and in the recent past it has been imbued with
heroic and revolutionary connotations (as in
Maoism, for example). In modern usage, peas-
ants are to be found on family farms (farming
households) that function as relatively corpor-
ate units of production, consumption and
reproduction (Chayanov, 1966). The particu-
lar social structural forms of the domestic unit
(nuclear families, multi-generational extended
families, intra-household sexualdivisions of
labourand property systems), the social rela-
tions between households within peasantcom-
munities and the ecological relations of
production (the peasant ecotype) are, however,
extremely heterogeneous (Wolf, 1966). The
terms ‘peasant’ and ‘peasantry’ have often been
employed loosely to describe a broad range of

rural producers as generic types characterized
by certain social, cultural or economic traits:
the backward or anti-economic peasant, the
rational and moral peasant, the uncaptured
peasant. These and other terms such as ‘trad-
itional’, ‘subsistence’ or ‘smallholder’ detract
from the important analytical task of situating
peasants as specific social producers in con-
crete, historically specific political economies
with their own dynamics and laws of motion.
Peasants are distinguished by direct access
to their means of production in land, by the
predominant use of family labour and by a
high degree of self-sufficiency (seesubsist-
ence agriculture). Nonetheless, all peasants
are by definition characterized by a partial
engagement with markets (which tend to func-
tion with a high degree of imperfection) and
are subordinate actors in larger political econ-
omies, in which they fulfil obligations to hold-
ers of political and economicpower. Peasants
as forms of household enterprise rooted
primarily in production on the land have a
distinctivelabour process(the unity of the
domestic unit and the productive group) and a
unique combination of labour and property
through partial market involvement. Peasants
stand between those social groups that have
lost all or most of their productive assets (pro-
letarians or semi-proletarians), on the one
hand, and farming households that are fully
involved in the market (so-called petty or sim-
ple commodity producers), on the other. Seen
in this way, peasants have existed under a
variety of economic, political and cultural cir-
cumstances (e.g.feudalism,capitalismand
statesocialism) spanning vast periods of his-
tory, and are ‘part societies’. Peasant societies
are often seen as transitional – they ‘stand
midway between the primitive tribe and indus-
trial society’ (Wolf, 1966, p. vii) – and yet are
marginal or outsiders, ‘subordinate to a group
of controlling outsiders’ (Wolf, 1966, p. 13)
who appropriate surpluses in a variety of forms
(rent, interest, unequal exchange).
In manythird worldsocieties in which
peasants continue to constitute an important
and occasional dominant stratum, a central
question pertains to the fate of the peasantry
inrelationtogrowingstateandmarketinvolve-
ment. Peasants are invariably the victims of
modernity(Moore, 1966). The questions of
growing commercialization and mechanization
of peasant production and of the growth of off-
farm income (migration, craft production,
local wage labour) are reflected in the long-
standing concern with internal differentiation
among peasantries and hence their long-term

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PEASANT
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