@article{oai:teapot.lib.ocha.ac.jp:00033525, author = {石塚, 道子 and ISHIZUKA, Michiko}, journal = {F-GENSジャーナル}, month = {Mar}, note = {application/pdf, 紀要論文, This paper tries to clarify the impact of structural and gender analysis to explain the nature of small farming in the contemporary Caribbean. First, I query the validity of the past and the latest classifications on world agricultural regions, which cannot address the nature of small farming in the Caribbean. Second, I examine the notion of “Internal Marketing Systems,” proposed by Sideny Mintz in the late 1950s, from the perspective of gender. The purpose of reconsidering the notion of “Internal Marketing Systems” is to know how Mintz had found a way to articulate two different modes of production in the Caribbean before the development of dependency theory on economy in the Third World and to examine what escaped Mintz's notice due to the lack of gender analysis. Third, I reexamine information about women's work in agriculture and local markets presented in Mintz, Horowitz, De l'orme and Ishizuka's respective papers between 1960 to 2003, in order to complement Mintz's notion. What needs to be emphasized is that women play a major economic role in agriculture in the Caribbean as farm workers, farmers, farm l\ aborers, heads of farm households and marketers of agricultural produce. Women are primarily self-employed subsistence farmers and producers/traders. They almost completely dominate the distribution and retailing of local grown food crops. Finally, based on the theory of continuing original accumulation proposed by Claudia von Werlhof, I conclude that the work of women as producers/traders in local markets allows articulation of the production of small farming with global economy in the Caribbean.}, pages = {192--197}, title = {カリブ海地域における小規模農業とジェンダー ― 「内部市場売買システム」再考 ―}, volume = {10}, year = {2008} }