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Journal Article

Citation

Neelima K. Econ. Polit. Wkly. 2018; 53(26-27): 24-31.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Sameeksha Trust)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Farmer suicides due to agricultural distress are a tenacious and recurring tragedy that plunge the lives of the unprepared widows into chaos. First, the widows must struggle to survive in the same circumstances that claimed the lives of their husbands, but with much less experience and guidance. Second, the widows must emerge from entrenched invisibility imposed upon them by the state, the community, and even the family. However, the study of five widows of the farmer suicides across a decade in Vidarbha reveals differential dependence and autonomy. The widow-headed households of earlier cases appear to succeed with time as compared to the later cases, and mostly through their own individual agency. The study, originally conducted through the years 2014-17 in 18 villages of six tehsils of two districts of Vidarbha, also points to normalisation of distress of widows that leads to their continuous exclusion from the state understanding of farmer suicides. © 2018 Economic and Political Weekly. All rights reserved.


Language: en

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