Article contents
Conflict in Irrigation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 June 2009
Extract
Recently, in this journal, René Millon and others discussed the results of their study of irrigation agriculture in the contemporary social setting of the Teotihuacan Valley, Central Mexico. In introducing their study, the authors briefly noted comparable investigations (including my own) and came to the general conclusion that “any system of irrigation agriculture creates its own distinctive potential for both cohesion and conflict, whatever may be the social system of the people who practice it.” Do social systems play as passive a role in determining the social effects of irrigation agriculture as the statement implies? I wish to suggest a distinction which may be important in seeking answers to this question and then to briefly compare certain aspects of Millon's Mexican example with my own study of irrigation agriculture and social organization in the Southern Euphrates Valley of Iraq.
- Type
- Agrarian Reform, Irrigation, and Development
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1963
References
1 René Millon, Hall, Clara and Diaz, May, “Conflict in the Modern Teotihuacan Irrigation System”, Comparative Studies in Society and History, IV (1962), p. 495.Google Scholar
2 For a complete statement of this work see Robert Fernea, A., Irrigation and Social Organization among the El Shabāna, a Group of Tribal Cultivators in Southern Iraq. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chicago Library, 1959.Google Scholar
3 Great Britain, Bureau, Arab, Administration Report of Diwaniyah District, 1918 (Baghdad, 1918), p. 98.Google Scholar
4 Leach, E.R., Pul Eliya, A Village in Ceylon (CambridgeUniversity Press, 1961), p. 9.Google Scholar
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