Each to their own: Ethnographic notes on the economic organisation of poor households in urban Nicaragua
Each to their own: Ethnographic notes on the economic organisation of poor households in urban Nicaragua
This article pesents some ethnographic notes on the economic organisation of poor househoulds in urban Nicaragua. These highlight a number of atypical features that raise several important theoretical questions. In particular, they highlight the possible emergence of non-cooperative households, and point to a problematic association in the literature between doubly 'naturalised' notions of kinship and households. The article concludes that not only are neiuther households nor families inherently cooperative, nut moreoveer they are not internally unified institutions. They are rather multifaceted in nature. In order to properly understand them they need to be conceived in terms of their internal institutional dynamics.
CITATION: Rodgers, Dennis. Each to their own: Ethnographic notes on the economic organisation of poor households in urban Nicaragua . : Taylor & Francis Group , . The Journal of Development Studies, Vol. 43, Number 3, April 2007, pp .391 - 419 - Available at: https://library.au.int/each-their-own-ethnographic-notes-economic-organisation-poor-households-urban-nicaragua-3