The dynamics of a New Guinea Highlands agricultural system
Date
1968
Authors
Waddell, Eric Wilson
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Abstract
There is an abundance of material dealing with agricultural practices in the tropics, in particular
those described as involving 'shifting cultivation', and Spencer (1966) has recently covered the
Southeast Asian literature. However research is only now beginning to emerge from that
intellectual cul-de-sac in which attention has been focussed almost exclusively on crop and fallow
cycles and interpretations have been influenced by assumptions about their essential immutability
and relative
inefficiency in the use of land and labour. As long ago as the 1930s and 19^0s anthropologists
associated
with the Rhodes-Livingstone Institute sought to abstract the sets of interconnections that exist
between social relationships, ecological relationships, modes of belief, etc., while officers of
the Northern Rhodesia Department of Agriculture attempted to evaluate the nature and effectiveness
the same people's adjustment to their environment through their agricultural practices.
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