ABSTRACT

At the beginning of the twentieth century, farming was Turkey’s largest source of family provisioning, the agricultural sector its largest employer and contributor to GDP, and the main constraints to Turkish agriculture were labour and capital. Agriculture in Turkey was largely led by state policies aiming to develop the home market in this sector, with a range of institutions and mechanisms developed to support and protect farmers while stimulating growth. Until the 1950s, rural life was the norm and the village remained a dominant feature in social culture. Then, agriculture and the rurality underwent a period of radical change. In recent times, particularly, the destructive effects of neoliberal politics on local agriculture weakened the sustainability of farming and rural life. Against this, however, there has been a range of creative responses. Farming families, communities, and related social developments are nowadays creating another reality. Analysis of this involves an overarching conception of rural-urban connectedness through a dual settlement or multi-place life in which people (including nuclear and extended families) as agents negotiate and integrate innumerable, dynamic residence/employment combinations. Farming as a constituent part of life in the rurality remains fundamental to the new, hybrid living forms, but agriculture is no longer the life-defining matrix of village life that it once was.