Fr. 254.40

Money From the Government in Latin America - Conditional Cash Transfer Programs and Rural Lives

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book looks at how conditional cash transfer programmes have affected the lives of rural communities in Latin America since the schemes appeared on the scene twenty years ago. With case studies ranging from Chile, Mexico, Peru, Brazil and Colombia, this book will interest scholars of anthropology, sociology, development, economics and politics.


List of contents

Introduction: Rearticulations of rural lives through conditional cash transfers
Martin Fotta and Maria Elisa Balen
PART I: GLOBAL CCT REPERTOIRES AND THEIR LOCAL TRANSLATIONS
1. Gendering and engendering capital: Conditional cash transfers in indigenous and rural households, Yucatan, Mexico
Andrés Dapuez
2. Filling the belly and feeding the mind? Bolsa Família and the building of children’s human capital in rural Amazonia
Barbara A. Piperata
3. Peruvian mothers contending with conditional aid and its selective inattention to the conditions of rural life
Tara Patricia Cookson
PART II: CCTs ORGANIZING COMMUNITY RELATIONS
4. Fragmented rural communities: The faenas of Prospera at the interface of community cooperation and state dependency
Clément Crucifix and Solène Morvant-Roux
5. Empowering women? Conditional cash transfers in Mexico
Birgit Schmook, Nora Haenn, Claudia Radel and Santana Navarro-Olmedo
6. Money from above: Cash transfers, moral desert and enfranchisement among Guaraní households of the Argentine Chaco
Agustin Diz
7. Dangerous desires: The affects (and affections) of cash transfer programs among the Kalapalo from the Aiha village (Upper Xingu, Mato Grosso, Brazil)
Marina Pereira Novo
PART III: ENVISIONING FUTURES THROUGH CCTs
8. From surprise to anticipation: Money, state and the future of social protection among displaced peasants in El Carmen de Bolívar, Colombia
Maria Elisa Balen
9. Beyond cash, beyond conditional: Ingreso Ético Familiar and the senses of poverty in a group of Mapuche women
Marjorie Murray and Gabriela Cabaña
10. Saying no: Bolsa Família, self-employment, and the rejection of jobs in northeastern Brazil
Gregory Duff Morton
Afterword: From affirmative to transformative distributive politics
Jonathan DeVore

About the author

Maria Elisa Balen is Associate Researcher at the Grupo de Protección Social in the Universidad Nacional de Colombia’s Centro de Investigaciones para el Desarrollo, Colombia.
Martin Fotta is a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology of Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany.

Summary

This book looks at how conditional cash transfer programmes have affected the lives of rural communities in Latin America since the schemes appeared on the scene twenty years ago. With case studies ranging from Chile, Mexico, Peru, Brazil and Colombia, this book will interest scholars of anthropology, sociology, development, economics and politics.

Product details

Authors Maria Elisa Fotta Balen
Assisted by Maria Elisa Balen (Editor), Martin Fotta (Editor)
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd.
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 19.11.2018
 
EAN 9780815387374
ISBN 978-0-8153-8737-4
No. of pages 212
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Education > Social education, social work
Social sciences, law, business > Business > Economics

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