Journal article
Moral economies and markets: ‘Insider’ cassava trading in Kon Tum, Vietnam
P To, S Mahanty, W Dressler
Asia Pacific Viewpoint | WILEY-BLACKWELL | Published : 2016
DOI: 10.1111/apv.12119
Abstract
Vietnam's uplands have been increasingly integrated into commodity production for global markets. This paper focuses on the role of the cassava trader in connecting upland villagers as cassava producers to an emerging global cassava market. In Vietnam's Central Highlands, ethnic minority villagers engaging in a mixed economy of subsistence and cash crop production still practice communal resource use and reciprocal labour arrangements – customs associated with the (contested) notion of ‘moral economy’. In this context, traders have strategically traversed the insider–outsider divide, enlisting trust and reciprocity to extend the patron–client relationship between traders and villagers. In th..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
An earlier draft of this paper was presented at the Vietnam Update 2014 the Australian National University, December 2014. We would like to thank the participants, as well as Philip Taylor, Sarah Turner and two anonymous referees for their valuable comments. Thanks to Sophie Dowling for editorial support and to Tran Viet Dong for help with the map. This research was supported by funding from the Australian Research Council (DP120100270 The Political Ecology of Forest Carbon: Mainland Southeast Asia's new commodity frontier?).