| Wagering the Land |
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
| 1 INTRODUCTION |
| • | Abatan, Buguias, April 15, 1986 |
| • | The Transformation of Buguias Livelihood |
| Commercialization and Local Change |
| • | Commercial Agriculture and Environmental Degradation |
| • | Commercialization and Redistributive Feasts |
| • | Theoretical Underpinnings |
| • | Field Methods |
| • | Identifying Buguias in the Ethnographic Landscape |
| • | Overview |
| PART I PREWAR BUGUIAS |
| 2 Food, Fuel, and Fiber: Human Environmental Relations in Prewar Buguias |
| • | Introduction |
| Agricultural Fields |
| • | Dry Fields: Uma and Puwal |
| • | Door-Yard Gardens |
| • | Pond Fields: Taro and Rice |
| Animal Husbandry |
| • | Houselot Animals: Hogs and Chickens |
| • | Pasture Animals: Cattle, Water Buffalo, and Horses |
| • | Pasture Management |
| The Harvest of Uncultivated Lands |
| • | Hunting, Fishing, and Insect Gathering |
| • | Wild Plant Foods |
| • | Non-Food Products |
| Vegetational Change and Agricultural Intensification |
| • | Vegetational Change: the Kowal Thesis |
| • | Vegetational Change in Buguias |
| • | Agricultural Intensification |
| 3 Social Relations: Power and Labor |
| • | Introduction |
| The Commoners |
| • | Animal Sharing |
| • | Labor Organization and Gender |
| The Elite and their Servants |
| • | The Baknangs |
| • | Slaves, Servants, Itinerants, and Clients |
| Social Mobility |
| • | Class and Family |
| • | Inheritance and Downward Mobility |
| • | Upward Movement |
| Land Tenure |
| • | Indigenous Tenure |
| • | The American Intervention |
| • | Land Tenure and Class |
| 4 Religion: The Role of the Ancestors |
| • | Introduction |
| Gods and Spirits |
| • | The Buguias Pantheon |
| • | Spirits: Dangerous, Neutral, and Helpful |
| • | Spiritual Curing, Prevention of Harm, and Blessings |
| • | Religion and the Landscape |
| Prestige Feasts in Prewar Buguias |
| • | The Wedding Ceremony |
| • | Graded Prestige Feasts: The Pedit |
| • | The Buguias Funeral |
| • | Other Rites |
| Status Display |
| • | Blanket Rank |
| • | Ritual Experts |
| The Ideology of Ritual Performance |
| • | The Luck of the Ancestors |
| • | Ritual and Power in Human Society |
| • | The Tong Tongan Jural System |
| • | Grounds for Belief |
| • | The Economics of Ritual Expenditure |
| • | Social Stratification and Religious Expense |
| • | Power and Religion Reconsidered |
| 5 Commercial and Political Relations |
| • | Introduction |
| Trade Relations |
| • | Historical Background |
| • | Buguias Trade in the American Period |
| The Organization of Trade |
| • | Financial and Social Structures |
| • | Geographical Patterns |
| Local Specialization of Production |
| • | Ironwork |
| • | Copper |
| • | Other Local Specialties |
| The Prewar Vegetable Industry |
| • | Vegetables in Benguet |
| • | American Encouragement |
| • | Vegetables in Buguias |
| Imperial Power |
| • | The Spaniards |
| • | The American Regime |
| • | Education, Religion, and Economics |
| • | The Geography of Imperial Rule |
| Colonial Visions |
| • | The Future |
| Interregnum: The War |
| • | The Japanese Occupation |
| • | Hostilities |
| • | Social Consequences |
| PART II VITALITY AND VULNERABILITY: FLUCTUATIONS IN THE POSTWAR ECONOMY, 1946–1986 |
| • | Introduction |
| 6 The Establishment of Commercial Vegetable Agriculture |
| • | Introduction |
| Postwar Adjustments |
| • | The Aftermath of War |
| • | The Rise of a New Economic System |
| • | The Mountain Trail Vegetable Hearth |
| The Ecology of Early Vegetable Production in Buguias |
| • | New Techniques |
| • | Vegetables in the Uma |
| • | Terraced Gardens |
| • | Farming and Ranching in Conflict |
| Continuing Agricultural Development |
| • | Recession and Revival |
| • | The Agricultural Cooperatives |
| Crops and Field Types |
| • | Seasonal Patterns |
| • | Soils and Topography |
| • | Vegetables |
| • | The Survival of Subsistence Cropping |
| • | The Agroecological Transition |
| Strategies in Vegetable Farming |
| • | Crop Variability |
| • | Environmental (Mis)fortune |
| • | Insurance Strategies |
| The Spatial Reorganization of Exchange |
| • | The Displacement of Buguias Central |
| • | The Rise of the North |
| • | The Market in Buguias Central |
| • | Connections with the Global Economy |
| 7 The Sociology and Economics of Vegetable Production, 1946–1972 |
| • | Introduction |
| Restructured Social Relations |
| • | Class Stratification |
| • | Living Standards |
| • | Gender Relations |
| Capital and Labor |
| • | Sources of Capital |
| • | Sharecropping |
| • | Wage and Cooperative Labor |
| • | Labor and Credit Elsewhere in Buguias Municipality |
| The Vegetable Trade |
| • | The Early Vegetable Traders |
| • | Bisna and Stafin Olsim |
| • | The Practice of Vegetable Trading |
| • | Agribusiness Reconsidered |
| 8 Economic and Ecological Crisis |
| • | Introduction |
| Boom, Bust, and Readjustment |
| • | Boom |
| • | Bust |
| • | Readjustments |
| • | Transformation of the Vegetable Trade |
| • | The Precarious State of the Vegetable Industry |
| Demography |
| • | Population Trends |
| • | Local Attitudes and Population Growth |
| Deforestation |
| • | Pine and Oak Forests: 1930–1980 |
| • | Recent Forestry Practices in Buguias |
| • | Development Plans: Social and Agroforestry |
| Water Shortages, Erosion, and Biocides |
| • | Water Shortages |
| • | Erosion |
| • | Biocides, Human Health, and Faunal Destruction |
| The Vegetable Frontier |
| • | Geographical Patterns of Expansion |
| • | Continuing Road Development |
| • | Land Speculation |
| 9 Social Conflict and Political Struggle |
| • | Introduction |
| Land Conflicts |
| • | Community and Private Lands |
| • | Land Conflicts in Buguias Central |
| • | Tax declarations and Conflict Settlement |
| • | The Rise of Youth Culture |
| Contemporary Politics |
| • | Benguet and the Philippine Government |
| • | Local Politics |
| • | Martial Law and Revolution |
| • | The CPA |
| • | The 1986 Election and Beyond |
| 10 Religion in Modern Buguias |
| • | Introduction |
| The "Buguias Paganism System" |
| • | Omens and Rites |
| • | Feasting and Social Stratification |
| Christian Challenge and Pagan Response |
| • | The Spread of Christianity |
| • | Religious Rivalry: the Christian Position |
| • | Pagan Responses |
| The Geography of Religion |
| • | The Eastern Frontier |
| • | Buguias as a Center of Modern Paganism |
| Religious Plurality in Present-Day Buguias |
| • | Religious Conflict |
| • | Recent Change and Compromise |
| • | Trends |
| 11 Conclusion: Understanding Buguias's Aberrant Development |
| • | The Commercial History of Buguias |
| • | Geographical Patterns |
| The Ideology of Pagan Economics |
| • | Contention, Rhetoric, and Power |
| • | Max Weber and the Spirit of Capitalism |
| Ritual Economics and the Social Order |
| • | Prestige Feasts and Social Differentiation |
| • | Analyzing the Social Formation of Buguias |
| • | Materialism and Idealism |
| Ritual Survival, Ecological Devastation |
| • | Environmental Threats |
| • | Prospects |
| Notes |
| • | 1 INTRODUCTION |
| • | 2 Food, Fuel, and Fiber: Human Environmental Relations in Prewar Buguias |
| • | 3 Social Relations: Power and Labor |
| • | 4 Religion: The Role of the Ancestors |
| • | 5 Commercial and Political Relations |
| • | 6 The Establishment of Commercial Vegetable Agriculture |
| • | 8 Economic and Ecological Crisis |
| • | 9 Social Conflict and Political Struggle |
| • | 10 Religion in Modern Buguias |
| • | 11 Conclusion: Understanding Buguias's Aberrant Development |
| GLOSSARY |
| BIBLIOGRAPHY |
| • | Archival Sources |
| • | Newspapers |
| INDEX |
| • | A |
| • | B |
| • | C |
| • | D |
| • | E |
| • | F |
| • | G |
| • | H |
| • | I |
| • | J |
| • | K |
| • | L |
| • | M |
| • | N |
| • | O |
| • | P |
| • | R |
| • | S |
| • | T |
| • | U |
| • | V |
| • | W |
| • | Y |