Book

Unseasonal migrations: the effects of rural labor scarcity in Peru

Princeton University PressPrinceton, N.J. • Published In 1988 • Pages:

By: Collins, Jane Lou.

Abstract
Focusing on the district of Moho in Huancané Province on the northeastern shore of Lake Titicaca (department of Puno), Collins attempts to account for the fact that while the highland peasants produce coffee in the Tambopata Valley of southern Peru, they have not established permanent settlements there, preferring instead to travel seasonally to the area. Collins reviews the history of this migrational pattern and examines the nature of the social relationships in the highlands that make such migrations both necessary and possible. In addition she also attempts to show '…how migration has altered highland productive regimens and how continuing food production in the highlands affects migrants' use of resources in the lowland coffee region' (p. xii).
Subjects
Internal migration
Annual cycle
Tillage
Arboriculture
Real property
Production and supply
Labor supply and employment
Travel
Serfdom and peonage
culture
Aymara
HRAF PubDate
1995
Region
South America
Sub Region
Central Andes
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle
Field Date
1977, 1980 (p. xiii-iv)
Coverage Date
not specified
Coverage Place
Moho district, Huacané province, department of Puno, Peru
Notes
Jane L. Collins
Includes index. Bibliography: p. [187]-207
LCCN
88004084
LCSH
Aymara Indians