Boletim do Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi. Ciências Humanas (Aug 2008)
The house and the garden: socio-economy, demography and agriculture in Quilombola populations of the Ribeira Valley, São Paulo, Brazil
Abstract
This study aims to characterize the socioeconomic and demographic profile of nine Quilombola populations in the Ribeira Valley, State of São Paulo, and to identify the main factors responsible for the recent changes in their subsistence system. Since the first assemblages of runway and abandoned slaves in the 18th. century, the relations established by these populations with nearby towns and regional market have gone through periods of expansion and retraction, adapting and adjusting to new socioeconomic and political changes. In the last five decades, the impact of external factors on the local subsistence patterns appears to have had a significant increase. Our results show that restrictions imposed by environmental laws, conflict over land, the construction of a major road in the region, the growing insertion into a market economy, and the intervention of governmental and non-governmental development agencies are the main factors behind the changes observed in the subsistence system and, consequently, in the socioeconomic organization of these populations.