|
Social Organization of Agricultural
Labor
among the Kofyar of Nigeria
AN EXAMPLE OF WEB-BASED SCHOLARSHIP
based on an excerpt from
Settlement Ecology: The Social and Spatial Organization of Kofyar
Agriculture (1996), by Glenn Davis Stone.
Univ. of Arizona Press, Tucson.
Reprinted with permission.
KEY TO ICONS
BACKGROUND TO EXCERPT
Let us look at the frontier Kofyars' social mechanisms for providing
labor, and at the Kofyars' reasons for mobilizing labor in these ways. I
focus here on the three principal labor mobilization strategies that
account for 98% of all farm work. [
BREAKDOWN OF LABOR
TYPES
]
|
Household labor,
in which family households work
on their own
fields, accounts for the bulk of Kofyar agricultural hours. Household
fields include both those plots controlled by the household head and those
held in usufruct by others in the household. Household labor is applied
by individuals or groups usually numbering five or less. This type of
labor is easily mobilized and highly flexible. [IMAGERY]
|
|
Mar muos
[
PRONUNCIATION], based on
the homeland labor parties of the same name, are large neighborhood work groups, also
known as festive labor parties. These gatherings typically involve 30-60 workers but
may exceed 100. They are characterized by a spirit of friendly competition and an
almost frenzied pace of work. All present are served millet beer after the work. Mar
muos usually must be scheduled weeks in advance, and they require several days of
brewing work by the women in the household. [IMAGERY ] [REFS]
|
|
Wuk
exchange-labor groups,
typically ranging from 5 to 20 in
size, are between the more formal mar muos and small-scale, flexible household labor. Wuk are
membership groups or voluntary associations whose participants take turns working on each
other's fields. The workers are repaid with reciprocal labor (which is carefully noted) at later
meetings of the group. Most households belong to a wuk with their neighbors, sending various
household members to each labor event. Individuals also form wuk groups, usually along age and
sex lines, that meet to work on individual plots.
[IMAGERY]
|
GROUP LABOR
DATASET
Group labor is especially important during the rainy season; exactly one-third
of the farm labor between mid April and mid October is mobilized by suprahousehold groups. But why is labor pooled in the first place? The three factors
paramount in this case are:
-
quantity and quality of labor
-
simultaneous labor demands
-
labor banking
.
Related issues
|