Published 2000
Journal article Open

Change in the land use system in Bhutan: Ecology, history, culture and power

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In this two part analysis the author attemps to answer questions with reference to historical land use and tenurial systems in Bhutan. The first part throws light on the popularly held view that land tenure in Bhutan was feudal prior to the advent of moderisation. By looking at the lived experiences of peasants in Bhutan, as human agents at the nexus of social, political, economic, and ecological forces, a nuanced and complex picture of land use systems in Bhutan emerges. He argues that in contradistinction to a feudal tenancy mode, historically land has been held in private for the most part although other arrangements existed alongside private property ownership. Monastic estates, and estates belonging to the handful of nobility were worked by tenured serfs and slaves. In part II, the author tries to build an analytical framework for an alternative explanation to feudalism in Bhutan. Rather than relying on the 'Tibetan model' and the 'empty land model' which are closely linked, he instead builds a layer model for the explanation of land use systems in Bhutan.

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Publishing information

Title
Journal of Bhutan Studies, Volume 2, Number 1, Autumn 2000: http://himalaya.socanth.cam.ac.uk/collections/journals/jbs/pdf/JBS_02_01_03.pdf

Regional member countries

RMC
Bhutan

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Special note
MFOLL

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10455