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Article
Subsistence Migration: Smallholder Food Security and the Maintenance of Agriculture Through Mobility in Nicaragua
The Geographical Journal (2018)
  • Claudia Radel
Abstract
Research on Central American migration has revealed the importance of journeys to the global North for rural sending communities. The outcomes of south–south journeys to nearby countries are less explored, although they are commonplace. We examine Nicaraguan rural residents’ migration to other Central American countries, especially El Salvador, to understand this migration's impacts on agricultural systems and food security. Based on mixed‐methods fieldwork in north‐western Nicaragua, we find that rather than produce remittance landscapes, or an abandonment of agriculture, south–south migration is linked to the maintenance of small‐scale agricultural systems and thus food production. “Subsistence migration,” or mobility to maintain small‐scale agriculture as a food security strategy, draws attention to how these less explored forms of migration in Central America help families to persist in agriculture in a context of worsening environmental and structural conditions.
Publication Date
2018
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/geoj.12287
Citation Information
Claudia Radel. "Subsistence Migration: Smallholder Food Security and the Maintenance of Agriculture Through Mobility in Nicaragua" The Geographical Journal Vol. 185 Iss. 2 (2018)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/claudia_radel/58/