Daniel Thorner's Classification of Rural Classes into Three Social Categories
Daniel Thorner classified rural classes into tree social categories namely;
(a) maliks,
(b) kisans and
(c) mazdoors, on the basis of three criteria which are as follows:
(i) Income obtained from the land- i.e. through rent, one's own cultivation or wages.
(ii) The nature of rights- i.e. ownership rights, tenancy rights, sharecropping rights, or no rights at all.
(iii) The extent of field work actually performed- i.e. doing no work at all, doing partial work, doing total work, and doing work for others to earn wages.
The three agrarian classes which Daniel Thorner spoke of are (a) Malik, (b) Kisan, and (c) Mazdoor.
According to Thorner, the prevalent agrarian relations can also be analyzed in terms of these three specific terms.
Dhanagare's Model of Agrarian Classes
Prof. D.N. Dhanagare has commented that Thorner's classification of agrarian classes suffers from its own limitations for it is not based on any theoretical assumptions. Dhanagare himself has suggested yet another model of agrarian classes. Dhanagare's model consists of five categories or classes which are as follows:
(i) landlords
(ii) rich peasants
(iii) middle peasants
(iv) landless labour
(v) poor peasants.
Agrarian classes based on the size of the cultivated land
On the basis of the size of the land possessed by the peasants and the other sources of income which they obtain, one can speak of a fivefold classification of agrarian classes. It is as follows:
(i) Big farmers who hold more than four hectares of land.
(ii) Medium farmers owning 2-4 hectares of cultivable land
(iii) Small famers possessing 1-2 hectares of land
(iv) Marginal farmers having land whose size is less than one hectare.
(v) Agricultural labourers who may [or may not] possess a small piece of land and who mainly relies on wage labour as their source of income.
The above mentioned classifications of agrarian classes signify that a few more classifications are possible. It is very difficult to make a clear identification and analysis of agrarian classes in the Indian rural set up for it is highly varied and complex.
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