Curriculum Vitaes

Takeshi Ito

  (伊藤 毅)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Professor, Faculty of Liberal Arts, Department of Liberal Arts, Sophia University
Degree
BA(Keio University)
MA(Hitotsubashi University)
MA(Yale University)
M.Phil(Yale University)
Ph.D.(Yale University)

J-GLOBAL ID
201301090630316685
researchmap Member ID
7000004351

External link

Research Interests:
Agrarian and Environmental Change; Political Economy; Political Ecology; Development; Power, Domination, and Resistance; Ecology, Capitalism, and the State.


Papers

 18
  • Ramesh Sunam, Fraser Sugden, Arjun Kharel, Tula Raj Sunuwar, Takeshi Ito
    Journal of Agrarian Change, Nov 17, 2024  Peer-reviewed
    Abstract Young people are increasingly turning away from agriculture in many parts of the global South, even where agriculture remains the backbone of livelihoods and the rural economy. This tendency among rural youth has become a critical research and public concern given that mass youth un (der)employment has emerged as a defining feature in many countries. In this paper, we interrogate and depart from the dominant narrative of the youth‐agriculture disconnect by focussing on socio‐economic conditions that shape diverse patterns of youth livelihood in rural areas. Our empirical evidence draws on ethnographic studies conducted in rural parts of Nepal with in‐depth interviews with young people complemented by key informant interviews with local leaders and community workers who shared their experiences and local narratives of the links among youth, agriculture and migration. Findings show that youth aspiration to leave agriculture is hard to deny, although this is heavily mediated by economic status, caste and gender in rural contexts. Given the chronic livelihood insecurity and the structural barriers rooted in class, caste and gender, we find that youth from underprivileged backgrounds do not have the luxury of considering an ‘exit’ from agriculture despite their mobility aspirations. When a longer‐term livelihood trajectory is considered, youth aspirations to transition out of agriculture show some degree of temporality regardless of their background, suggesting their re‐engagement in agriculture later in their life.
  • Takehiro Watanabe, Takeshi Ito
    International Journal of Asian Studies, Oct, 2024  Peer-reviewed
  • Takeshi Ito
    SACRU reflections on World Food Safety Day, 2022  Lead author
  • Takeshi Ito, Mikiko Sugiura
    Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development, 63(5) 14-25, Sep 3, 2021  Peer-reviewedLead author
  • Takeshi Ito
    The Journal of Asian Studies, 80(2) 399-405, May, 2021  Peer-reviewed
    Undeniably, one of the rare characteristics of James C. Scott's scholarship is that his analytical insights are widely recognized in many fields beyond political science and Asian studies. Scott's contributions to the vast literatures of agrarian and environmental studies, the theory of hegemony and resistance, development studies, postcolonial studies, state formation, and anarchism, to name just a few, are recognized by scholars of diverse disciplines as new standards that challenge widely accepted assumptions and theories and reveal underappreciated aspects and untold narratives of social history—particularly for those who, under normal conditions, do not raise their voice and did not have letters to leave records.

Books and Other Publications

 1

Presentations

 60

Research Projects

 14

Social Activities

 1