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The contrast in the rate of growth between Western and Eastern societies since 1800 has caused Asian societies to be characterized as backward and resistant to change, though until 1600 or so certain Asian states were technologically far in advance of Europe. The Rice Economies, drawing on original source materials, examines patterns of technological and social evolution specific to East-Asian wet-rice economies in order to clarfiy some general historical trends in economic development.
Francesca Bray is Professor of Anthropology at University of California, Santa Barbara and author of Agriculture, Volume VI, part 2 in Joseph Needham's Science and Civilization in China (1984).
List of figures and tablesChinese dynastiesJapanese erasPrefaceAcknowledgementsMapsIntroductionEurocentric models of historical changeAn alternative modelThe significance of a model of development for rice economies 1 The rice-plant: diversity and intensificationThe origins of Asian riceNatural characteristics of riceSelection techniques 2 Paths of technical developmentBuilding new fieldsRaising yieldsLabour productivity and the mechanisation question 3 Water controlWater control and institutions: the debateA technical classification of water control systemsGravity-fed irrigation networks Ponds, tanks and reservoirs Contour canals 'Creek' irrigation Pump irrigation schemes Patterns of growth and change 4 Rice and the wider economy 'Skill-oriented' and 'mechanical' technologies The specificity of wet-rice agriculture Uniformity and systemic change Monoculture and markets Economic diversification Petty commodity production and rural industrialisation 5 Development Some basic issues Labour and capital The historical experience: the predominance of labour and the 'Japanese model'Choice of technological inputs Capital investment Productivity of labour and capital Expertise and participation 6 Peasant, landlord and state: changes in relations of production Conflict, cooperation and control Historical changes in relations of production 'Feudal' relations and frontier zones Smallholder economies: expansion and stagnation Egalitarianism or differentiation: the impact of capitalism Land and landlessness 'Land to the tiller' Group farming Socialist land reform Appendix A: The Western model Appendix B: The historical experience of China Appendix C: The Japanese experienceNotesReferencesGlossaryIndex