Apple Growers' Associations in Northwestern India: Emergence, Success, and Limitations in the Context of State-Society Interactions

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2008

Journal / Book Title

Human Organization: Journal of the Society for Applied Anthropology

Abstract

Apple growers' associations in northwestern Himalayas have played an important role in the transition from subsistence agriculture to commercial horticulture, experienced by the state of Himachal Pradesh in the lastthree decades. This paper is a case study of an association, explaining its emergence and successful functioning in terms of the historically specific and privileged relationship with the state. Furthermore, the convergence between the association's goals and the state's imperatives can only be understood in light of the sociopolitical and geographic reality of the region, which have made horticulture, particularly apple production, an economically and culturally viable development option. Finally, the paper analyzes both the successes of the association in overcoming entrenched problems long faced by apple growers, as well as its not-so successfid record in promoting broader social and environmental goals, the key to the sustainability of horticulture in the region.

DOI

10.17730/humo.67.1.e43017803m7716l2

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