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Agricultura, sociedad y desarrollo

versión impresa ISSN 1870-5472

agric. soc. desarro vol.15 no.2 Texcoco abr./jun. 2018

 

Articles

Territorial Potential as Factor of Development: Rural Management Model

Jimena V. Lee-Cortés1 

Javier Delgadillo-Macías1  * 

1Unidad de Investigación en Economía Urbana y Regional del Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. México. (arqlee09@gmail.com), (javierdelma@gmail.com).


Abstract

In view of the problems faced by the rural environment in the last decade, instruments have been promoted that are leading towards their solution; however, institutional contributions have been limited and unfavorable for a better development of the territories. Nevertheless, these efforts are recognized as models for the reorientation of the public policy directed at the rural sector. The objective of this study is to show that the potentials for development and public programs with possible impact require methodological proposals that are sensitive to the components of the productive and social structure, and to the problems that prevent improving the living conditions of the rural population and promoting territorial development. For this purpose, a model of socio-spatial interaction that shows the characteristics of the local activities and resources, as well as the role of public, social and private action as integrating factors of development for the territories selected.

Key words: rural development; territorial management; socio-spatial interaction; rural programs; territorial potentials for development

Resumen

Ante los problemas que enfrenta el medio rural en la última década se han promovido instrumentos encaminados a su solución; sin embargo, los aportes institucionales han sido limitados y poco favorables para el mejor desenvolvimiento de los territorios. No obstante, se reconocen estos esfuerzos como referentes para la reorientación de la política pública dirigida al sector rural. El objetivo del trabajo es mostrar que los potenciales de desarrollo y los programas públicos con posible impacto requieren de propuestas metodológicas que sean sensibles a los componentes de la estructura productiva y social, y a los problemas que impiden mejorar las condiciones de vida de la población rural y promover el desarrollo territorial. Para ello se emplea un modelo de interacción socio-espacial que muestra las características de las actividades y recursos locales, así como del papel de la acción pública, social y privada como factores integradores de desarrollo de los territorios seleccionados.

Palabras clave: desarrollo rural; gestión territorial; interacción socio-espacial; programas rurales; potenciales territoriales de desarrollo

Introduction

In México, many territories are in the midst of a crisis that dates back at least 30 years, provoking a phenomenon of economic marginalization and social exclusion that is progressively aggravated. Peasant families represent a fourth part of the national population and poverty affects more than 60 % of them; two out of three inhabitants in the rural sector live in high marginalization zones, do not have basic services of water, drainage, electric energy, and lack access to education and elemental health services. In addition, sustaining economic activities is not very promising and a condition is observed where with higher frequency the strategies of economic development privilege the role of the cities, insofar as the geographic distribution of rural localities is quite disperse (67.8 % of the localities are smaller than 50 inhabitants). Likewise, in the rural zones there is backwardness in matters of basic and productive infrastructure, which among other consequences increases the abandonment of the land by its inhabitants, unleashes a pattern of high migration of the economically active population, and produces scarce capitalization inside the communities. Within this context of asymmetries between actors and places it is urgent to promote a participative local development, stemming from the implementation of a model of economy based on the endogenous potentials of the territories themselves.

The crisis situation of the Mexican rural environment is the result of the model of commercial openness where governments wagered on economic growth, postponing the public policies of social and solidary nature, leaving pending the welfare of the population (Calva, 2004). Under this model and according to Echeverri (INCA Rural, 2009), the public policies directed at the rural environmental have been implemented in two senses; on the one hand, those with an approach towards sectors with higher capacities and directed basically at products and, on the other hand, those channeled to the most disadvantaged sectors of the population around social actors, maintaining handout mentality approaches.

Recently, although new models have been adopted where the object of attention has changed towards the figure of territory as a specific subject for public policies, the logic of institutional action remains in many cases within the sectorial order with scales of political-administrative rapprochement and parameters that respond to the latter. Policies as strengthening instrument for the development of the territories have an uncertain role and impact; it is observed that the scale, that is, the territorial level in which they are located for their design, is generalizing, which is why specificities that shape the communities are overlooked, at the same time that dependency is generated in the beneficiaries on the transference of public resources.

In particular, rural communities in the states of Oaxaca and Guerrero, study subject of this research, are among the most backward of the country and characterized by having activities based on economies of natural resources or transformation1. Both entities, located south of the country, have important potential resources derived from their natural and environmental wealth, and to the development of activities linked to the culture of their peoples, which has meant for them to receive benefits throughout the years derived from the broad offer of public programs directed at their communities. However, most of these only serve as palliatives with almost nonexistent actions of integral character, giving as a result that the capacities of local promotion and self-management of groups and communities become limited; likewise, there is co-responsibility by local actors, communities, social organizations, who also have not been able to propose a model or participation approaches which favor the development of their surroundings, assuming handout policies in a rash manner.

The territorial dimension and management approach

This study has the objective of developing a methodological model directed at detecting the possibilities of development present in communities of the rural environment, based on the behavior of the system of functions and economic, social, environmental and institutional relations from an approach of territorial management. The notion of development proposed refers to a process that provides growth and wealth generation to the community, as a result of processes sustained of social and territorial cohesion, and of analysis of the social actors, who through their diversity, interests and values influence the dynamics and conformation of the territory itself.

Development management in the territory is a process that is present; however, the effects are limited with regards to a real influence on the conditions of its habitants, as well as its resources. This provokes for the configuration of the territory to address marginally the problematic regarding the needs and its potentials, which leads us to consider that the problem is located in two senses; on the one hand, the influence present on territorial development, through the actions of public policies, specifically those related to the planning of development. On the other hand, the territory’s possibility, specifically the actors, of configuring and managing its development, taking advantage of internal potentials, as well as public and private initiatives that have an impact on its development.

A model composed by thematic dimensions that contemplates a review of the effect of public or private investment is proposed (which we call influence), exerted through the programs that are applied in the communities and incorporating as an indicator the exploitation of the resources available. It is based on a concept of integrality which, as is pointed out in the methodological model applied by the INCA Rural (2009:8), implies considering the economic organization of the territory as a functional structure of multi-sectorial character where a diversity of institutions interact based on the cultural, political and historical heritage of territories. The individual is addressed from his/her collective perception, which entails social interaction with his/her environment, regulations, customs, and common interests, expressed in the experiential territory. These relationships that are established from social (participation, actors and institutions) and territorial (location factors, regional indicators and local resources) attributes are known as socio-spatial interactions. In this same sense, Claude Grasland (2013) points out that for human geography, the relationships between places, whether these are cities, regions or the state, refer to localized social or economic aggregates, most times heterogeneous, composed by individuals (people, couples, enterprises, …) that do not dispose of the same income, the same capacities for mobility, or the same information on the distant opportunities for relation2

The rural territory is the space appropriated, produced and endowed with meaning. It is a spatial unit collectively negotiated, resulting from historical processes and actions led by actors, whether agents or subjects at any level, on the social appropriation of spaces built around the use and exploitation of the resources in the place. In these cases the development policies act as a strategy for the use of these resources and the promotion of capacities in different fields of action, through programs in charge of favoring the relationships between actors and promoting interactions between common territories. However, the agreement between government programs applied and development in rural territories is not clear if we consider persistent difficulties, such as the abandonment of communities and the low productive profiles in which producers of these areas are found.

The proposal we set out seeks to re-dimension the rural territories beyond them being mere owners of natural resources, for which their analysis is taken up again through an approach to the potentials they have and the way that they are linked to the actions implemented by public policies through handout and rural promotion programs, in terms of being vehicles for the development of communities.

We understand as territorial potentials the capacities of the territory’s inhabitants, the networks with which the processes of work and life are linked, as well as the participation of local institutions in the configuration of development and daily activities, with participative and inclusive schemes. According to Horton Douglas (2008), the potential stems from the fact that knowledge, abilities, attitudes, values, relations, motivations and conditions allow individuals, organizations, social networks, sectors and institutions the performance of their functions as well as reaching objectives set out for their development, although development elements also make up the territory’s structure, starting from physical features to identity elements that define and distinguish characteristics of one territory from another. They refer to the resources, the distribution of livelihoods in society, the availability of adequate specialized knowledge, the efficiency of local administration, the efficacy of connections between territories, and the relative capacity of people to participate in national and international markets.

Calculating the territorial potential of a place is based on the consideration of a hypothesis of socio-spatial interaction as a measure of accessibility that points to evaluating the favorable variation of the amount of local opportunities in function of the location of the place or the region and of the internal capacities developed.

The determination of the potentials in each place derives from integral territorial diagnoses in their functional dimension, although differentiated in terms of the processes that should be addressed. According to Coraggio (2004:16), a methodological problem that is present when performing a diagnosis is to determine what concrete segment of the social reality will be the object of analysis and under which criteria will it be carried out. Therefore, in the first place, it is about recognizing the type of relations and social factors that give specificity to each program, addressed here as potentials for the territory. In the second place, it is about typifying a set of social actors inserted in such relationships or situations, in relation to which the concrete intervention would be produced. We speak in this case of representative economic actors from each activity identified in the communities of study. In the sense that Coraggio suggests, the diagnosis becomes a fundamental element of the territorial management process when recognizing differentiated difficulties and causalities that should be addressed through processes that are also specific to each situation.

Territorial management must go through a process that leads actors and agents towards the appropriation of their potentials, their reproduction and the incorporation of elements of technological, productive and social innovation. It goes from being a government administrative task to a process of participation, coordination and negotiation of the agents in the territory on the basis of their potentials. The incorporation of these changes in the management implies the adoption and development of innovations in the structure of the territory, constituting a process of social, organizational and cultural change, as Albuquerque (1994: 316) points out, beyond technological changes in the production.

Territorial planning and management requires that the analysis and interventions on the territory develop with a vision according to the organization of the territory from multidisciplinary approaches. The territorial management mechanisms will be participative and not just normative, integrating physical planning and economic development.

Public actions directed at rural territories are determined by information and, in particular, by indicators that do not agree with the scale of needs and contributions that rural territories have and make; therefore, the methodology contemplated addresses the productive activities of people immersed in the rural context and their action and interaction as components of the territory system. To reach this purpose, a diagnosis of the potentials that the communities selected have is carried out and it is later linked to the actions of the programs that are applied, in order to be able to identify in which way they participate in the development process of the communities of study3.

The analysis scheme addresses rural development from the territorial approach, suggesting the situation of a territory and its dynamics, just as the following authors point out: Sepúlveda et al. (2003), Delgadillo (2004), De Janvry and Sadoulet (2004), Schejtman and Berdegué (2004), Quispe (2006), Echeverri and Echeverri (2009), among others, who consider the territory as the result from a multifactorial process composed of the conditions in which the resources are found, the distribution of the livelihoods of the society, the availability of adequate specialized knowledge, the efficiency of the local administration, the efficacy of the links between territories, and the relative capacity of people to participate in local, national or international markets.

Selection of the territorial units and methodological selection

The territorial management approach described in section two is also added for the analysis and the definition of the methodology, the Territorial Economic Development (TED) approach, based on what was proposed by Francisco Alburquerque in 1994 and modified by the author in 2007, who defines that economic development depends on the ability to integrate the exploitation of the available and potential resources, in order to satisfy the needs and basic problems of a territory. The collection of information that contributes elements for the analysis of the potentials for territorial economic development is considered, as well as the actions for the construction of an innovating environment, and the phases and actions in support of the activities that generate economic growth and productive employment. The analysis is composed of objectives, resources available, agents that promote development and the planning process in itself.

The objectives are fundamentally improving employment and the quality of life of the population and increasing social equity. Their achievement depends on a transformation of the territorial productive system, promotion of productive diversification and increase of the added value. In terms of the resources available, they must be used adequately based on a coherent strategy and both for the objectives and for the use of resources it is necessary to consider environmental sustainability.

As Alburquerque (1994:322) establishes, for the planning of economic development it is considered that there are real and potential resources, in addition to the needs as orienting elements of territory planning. From the valuation of the potentials for development and the local resources, the territorial socioeconomic and institutional environment is shaped, whose identification turns out to be significant.

Characterization of the units of analysis

The determination of the units of analysis stems from the hypothesis that the studies carried out in the territory used in the design of public policies reveal in a limited way the interactions that are found inside them and between common territories. For the observation, an inter-territorial comparison was established from two territories located in the states of Guerrero and Oaxaca, specifically in the municipalities of San Juan del Río (San Juan) and Tecpan de Galeana (Figure 1). The first of these, according to the socio-spatial relationships and the size of their population, contemplated the whole geographic and administrative area of the municipality, while in the second case two localities were chosen: San Luis de la Loma and San Luis San Pedro, identified as the San Luises in the region and because of their inhabitants. The research subjects, that is, the actors, are the inhabitants that perform productive activities that characterize each one of these territories.

Source: authors’ elaboration.

Figure 1 Location of the territories of study. 

San Juan del Río is located in the region of the Central Valleys of Oaxaca; it belongs to the district of Tlacolula de Matamoros, with an area of 108 km², which represents 0.12 % of the state’s total surface. It is located at an altitude of 1180 m, 95 km away from the capital city. The main supply centers for this community are the municipality of Tlacolula and the city of Oaxaca. The municipality of Mitla (outside the regional surroundings) also plays an important role since it is one of the main selling points of the products generated in the community.

According to the 13th Population and Housing Census 2010 by INEGI, the total population of the municipality of San Juan del Río is 1231 inhabitants and is composed mostly by a population of Zapotec indigenous people, who speak the dialect variant from the valley. Despite not having tourist attractions developed or natural resources, this territory, in order to become a strong agricultural-livestock region, has a population that conserves the tradition of elaborating two products of artisanal origin, which are mezcal and crochet knits of various kinds, as some of their main productive activities. Despite this, the economic activities lack strength for their development and there is high migration.

With a high degree of marginalization4, the population depends to a great degree on the public transferences that are done through assistance programs. In this sense, SEDESOL programs are an example of this, which by 2013 influence the community with four programs, Oportunidades being the most relevant, with 147 beneficiary families recorded in 1999 and until 2012, and 41 % of beneficiary population in the community.

On the other hand, the municipality of Tecpan, in the state of Guerrero, is located 120 meters above sea level, southwest of Chilpancingo; it has 2537.8 km2 of area that represent 3.98 % of the total surface of the state. It borders north with Coyuca de Catalán and Ajuchitlán del Progreso, east with Atoyac de Álvarez and Benito Juárez, south with the Pacific ocean, and west with Petatlán.

The San Luises are located at 20 m of altitude in average and at an approximate distance of 34 km from Tecpan, which is the municipal seat. Their main relations are with the neighboring locality of Nuxco and with Tecpan. The economic activities in the community are divided into two types, the traditional which have been part of their productive structure, which are the production of large livestock and the copra production of great relevance for the entity at large, while dairy processing and mango production are of recent incorporation, with high impact because of the importance in the region in their cultivation at the national level.

Adding the population from both localities, 9321 inhabitants were found in 2010, with a high degree of marginalization for that same year, according to CONAPO. The population receives backing from the Oportunidades program, which records 39 % of the population from the community as beneficiary, with 787 families; likewise, they participate in four more programs from SEDESOL.

In the territory, the inhabitants from the San Luises recognize a relationship that ties them intimately, since the basic infrastructure and equipment has been shared by their inhabitants practically since their formation. The main relationships of supply and production, as well as the supply of services (health and education, for example), are carried out with the cities of Acapulco and Zihuatanejo. Despite the journey to the city of Chilpancingo being longer, there is an important relationship derived primarily from the supply services and the need to resolve issues with the public institutions located there.

Methodological Selection

The territory is a space where productive, environmental, social, cultural and political processes are interrelated. It is built by use and appropriation, and the formative action is articulated to life and work processes, territorial perceptions and identities. From this conceptualization, the working scheme stems from the definition of the principal variable which we have called development in the community, and the determination of six complementary dimensions made up of a set of variables of indicators that are described later (Figure 2). The assumption of the model starts from the consideration that as these elements are taken advantage of they can influence favorably the living conditions of the inhabitants. The integration from different dimensions does not imply a mere sum of components, since all the indicators are related to one or more of these and derive from the resources, the functions, and the relations identified in the territory.

Source: authors’ elaboration.

Figure 2 Dimensions for the analysis. 

The functions and relationships in the community are addressed through the analysis of the characteristics of the environmental, sociodemographic surroundings, the economic-productive relations and the physical infrastructure with which the inhabitants’ activities develop, placing an emphasis on productive processes and incorporating the public or private programs that influence the communities to the observation. In this sense, the perception and execution of the actors in the territory are taken into account, as well as the disposition to participation in them, as an element that eases the application of the instruments and the adaptations, adjustments or modifications in favor of the strengthening of the social capital, and with it the territory in itself (Table 1).

Table 1 Working plan. 

Cemetery, firefighters, police, municipal garbage dump, gas station.

Source: authors’ elaboration.

An approach for analysis through potentials allows estimating the individual capacities of the organizations, networks and productive sectors, among others, for the implementations of the methods, strategies and programs that contribute elements for the development of capacities, proposing the components from each dimension as follows:

  1. Environmental Potential for Development. It refers to the physical characteristics of the territory, that is, of the natural resources, the variation that these have had in the last 20 years, and the uses recommended, in order to establish the relationship and relevance in the community’s activities.

  2. Material Potential for Development. Composed by basic services, housing and equipment, it considers establishing the characteristics and uses, availability and quality of these elements in the territory as part of the assets in the economic structure and for the community’s development.

  3. Productive Potential for Development. It observes the units, activities and productive chains described in the organization and the exploitation of the productive factors that make up the productive structure in a territory, as well as the action of actors based on their resources and abilities.

  4. Financial Potential for Development. It addresses the identification and characterization of the units with faculty to support the exploitation of the productive factors of the community, making it necessary to recognize the initiatives of the existing entrepreneurs and institutions for financing and credit, whether of public or private order.

  5. Human Capital Potential for Development. It considers the analysis of the demographic base and the existing relationship with productive factors, revealing which are the capacities of the actors and the aptitudes of the territories in their development.

  6. Social Capital Potential for Development. It contemplates the analysis of the composition of the relationships and the networks of actors in the territory for the development of activities in the territory, placing emphasis in those that have a collective character through the Family Production Units and the working groups. These elements influence the composition and relationship they have inside the territory and with other territories.

The instruments and application of the intervention model

The content of the research plan suggests the need to use quantitative and qualitative data, given that each component will be identified from the presence and perception in the inhabitants (productive actors) of the territories. The quantitative data contemplate the use of secondary sources, while the qualitative information results from the field research based on semi-structured interviews.

Descriptive analysis

The study is proposed at a descriptive level that identifies characteristics, forms of behavior and attitudes; it allows establishing concrete behaviors and uncovers and verifies the association between the research variables (Castillo de Matheus, Madriz, Márquez and Niño, 2007:118). Therefore, the situation of the resources identified in each one of the dimensions is described, according to the favorable and unfavorable aspects in the development of the potential they have.

Given that we refer to the analysis of the process of social intervention, we start from the hypothesis that structural transformations require changes in the way of conceiving social processes and, consequently, in the practices of the subjects involved and in their forms of social organization; thus, a broad working scheme is proposed that considers for each of the potentials one dimension. As Coraggio points out (2004:21-22):

An adequate conception of the processes about which there is a need to intervene to achieve development in function of the living conditions of the large majorities should lead to the establishment of integral objectives and policies, in the sense that they consider not only the aspects most directly linked to such conditions, but rather that they penetrate the complex mesh of relationships with a visualization of their procedural and reproductive nature.

Field research

The design of the field research is a non-experimental study which, as Hernández, Fernández and Baptista (2001:267) point out, consisted in observing phenomena, just as they take place in their natural context to later analyze them; in this model no situation is constructed, but rather situations that are pre-existing are observed. Likewise, a study of transactional or transversal nature is carried out, where data are collected in a single moment, at a single time, and which has the purpose of describing variables and analyzing their influence and interrelation at a given moment, which is why it constitutes the direct recollection of the situation of the productive actors in the territory.

The interview is applied based on a non-probabilistic sample through the “snowball” technique. The central idea of this is that each individual in the population can nominate other individuals in the territory, who have the same probability of being selected. The informants from the first sample are identified by direct reference from the interviewer, and in each interview it is established which new people from the population in study will be interviewed, in order to integrate the complete sample. The underlying assumption is that the members of the population that are not visible do not live in complete isolation, that is, they have at least a “social network” with which it is possible to contact them. The territorial actors (producers) are established as a unit of study, since they are the ones that have an integral vision of their territory, with the capacity to promote a broad range of activities and to develop the potentials.

Interviewing process

The field work was carried out in two moments, made up of two phases each, during July and August 2008. During the first phase, interviews were performed in the communities previously chosen through the method of directed selection of key actors where, having selected and established contact with the first key informant, he was requested to provide the name of another member of the community who performed an economic activity within the community, with the aim of having a general appraisal and being able to define, from this, which are the representative activities for the study. Likewise, interviews were carried out with local authorities that allowed visualizing, based on their opinion, the general landscape of the functional organization of the territory. In a second stage, a photographic appraisal was performed and the registry of natural resources, the status of housing (which allowed typifying them), as well as the inventory of basic infrastructure (water, electric service, drainage, among others), roads, equipment and services in general, with which the community undertakes its activities. This implied resorting to secondary informants, such as the ones in charge of the health center in each community, schools and libraries, for example. The first moment of this work consisted in the visit to the community of San Juan del Río where 15 interviews were carried out with key informants and around five informal interviews to obtain secondary data. The second moment was the field work in the San Luises, where 12 interviews of the first type were carried out and three of the second.

The interviews were applied in the households or workplaces, based to the convenience of the interview respondents, who were informed about the objectives of the research, who gave their approval to participating in the study voluntarily. In addition to the information obtained from interviews, there was the field diary, which considers the practices that communities perform and some situational conditions, such as information that was not collected through the instrument, but which reveals important data in support of the analysis and explanation of the work. Thus, each one of the dimensions is made richer by the contents of the interview.

Based on the objective of this study, it is sought for policies to be based on diagnosis and prognosis, and for them to recover the experience accumulated in the past, which is why the tasks of historical analysis, diagnosis and prognosis are grouped in the description of the phenomena (Coraggio, 2004:10). For this purpose, the information that makes up the indicators for each of the dimensions comes in first instance from bibliographic sources (mainly statistical). The perceptions gathered with the interview and those elements that turned out to be relevant from observation were incorporated into this information.

Design in measuring potentials

The analysis procedure for each one of the six potentials or dimensions consists in describing the characteristics of each community and their main economic activities, stemming from the indicators that make them up (Table 2). The attention given to each activity is included, referring to public actions (programs or institutions that participate), private actions, in addition to other elements that respond to efforts performed by the communities without having external support, which was called territorial initiative.

Table 2 Analysis by Potential for Development. 

Comunidad Actividades Indicadores Características Atención Tipo de actividad
San Juan Cultivo de maguey y producción de mezcal Tejidos Potencial medioambiental de desarrollo Pública/Privada/ Iniciativa territorial
Potencial material de desarrollo Potencial
Potencial productivo de desarrollo Motor
Potencial financiero de desarrollo Motor- Potencial
Potencial capital humano para el desarrollo
Potencial capital social para el desarrollo
San Luises Mango Potencial medioambiental de desarrollo Pública/Privada/ Iniciativa territorial
Potencial material de desarrollo Potencial
Coco Potencial productivo de desarrollo Motor
Cría de ganado bovinos-leche y elaboración de quesos Potencial financiero de desarrollo Motor- Potencial
Potencial capital humano para el desarrollo
Potencial capital social para el desarrollo

Source: authors’ elaboration.

Later, in order to define the impact of the programs found in the communities, the type of activity which it refers was included; in sum, the state of an activity according to its development, with regards to the result from the indicators and the support it receives. For this purpose, motor and potential activities were determined, where the proposal by Castillo et al. (2007:120) was used, calling motor activity the one that shows the situation of the community effectively. An example of this is that the economic sector that represents the economy of the territory is recognized as the development sector, for a relevant part of the current production of the locality is concentrated in it, and it has received public or private attention for its permanent production (Table 2 and Figure 3).

Source: authors’ elaboration.

Figure 3 Process for the determination of type of activity/resource. 

On the other hand, the potential activities are those that are also identified in the communities such as the ones in incipient development and which, following the previous example, are working but have not received the impulse necessary to become motor activities. In addition, the denomination of motor-potential activity was used for those representative resources, which being a motor also have high and promising conditions to increase their development.

What is being sought is to understand the impact of the proposals (public and private) at present, for the development of the communities. Therefore, the balance of the potentials estimates the individual capacities, those of organizations, networks and productive sectors, among others, that include the conditions in the communities for their implementation, as well as the methods, strategies and programs that contribute elements for the development of capacities (Table 3).

Table 3 Impact of the Type of activity by potential. 

Comunidad San Juan San Luises
Actividades Cultivo de maguey y producción de mezcal Tejidos a ganchillo Tejidos combinados Mango Coco Cría de ganado bovinos-leche y elaboración de quesos
Tipo de actividad por potencial Medioambiental 5 4 4 4 4 4
Material 1 1 1 5 3 1
Productivo 2 1 5 5 4 3
Financiero 1 1 5 5 4 1
Capital humano 1 1 5 5 4 1
Capital social 1 1 5 5 4 1
Resumen 11 9 25 29 23 11
Tipo de actividad Valor
Potencial 1
Motor 2 a 3
Motor-potencial 4 a 5

Source: authors’ elaboration.

Results from the analysis

Application of the model took place in three stages, with the first consisting of recording the context and collecting bibliographic information through the processing of databases for both communities. Parallel to these activities, the identification and contact of key informants was carried out that would allow beginning the appraisal of field information.

In a second stage the field visits to the territories took place, where visits were made to apply interviews and the photographic appraisal was done to document the productive processes, the state of the basic infrastructure and the equipment and natural resources, among other indicators. The interview respondents were primarily producers from the communities although local authorities and public officials were also approached. The third stage consisted in transcribing information from the interviews, and in processing and analyzing the results from the first and second stages in the matrices designed for that purpose.

The results from the research showed that the access and greater participation are concentrated in few programs, with Procampo predominating specifically, which is implemented by the Ministry of Agriculture (SAGARPA), and Oportunidades from the Ministry of Social Development (SEDESOL), with limited fields of participation that establish the territories as mere beneficiaries of programs that do not foster in and of themselves the development of their productive structures, because they are public transferences used for family subsistence and from auto-consumption crops that do not find resonance in other activities that allow the development of the territory. Likewise, a lack of appropriation and identification with the actions is observed.

On the other hand, although the aspects of attention in each territory acquire different dimensions, they do not reflect a connection for the development of integral actions. In this same sense, the figures of development management (agencies, professional services providers, etc.) are manifested under a sectorial character with insufficient and marginal impact.

The development of the work allowed identifying the incidence of the programs of assistance and promotion for the development of the potentials that the institutions and public and private programs carry out, as well as actions implemented by the community itself (territorial initiative).

With this, it could be seen that the influences of the community on their own processes require a necessary strengthening and support by the institutions already present, especially, despite the advantages afforded to the territory with regards to the support and identification of inhabitants with these.

On the other hand, the repercussions of the relationship between public policies and their actions differentiate importantly the conditions of the territories, since the development of the activities and the impact that they have are linked relevantly to the development of the capacities, the potentials, and the strengthening that they have.

The status of the activities that coincide in the conformation of the territory’s economy take advantage and potentiate in various ways the pool of resources they have at their disposition, depending in a relevant manner on the capacities developed by the actors, insofar as they find support in their development (Table 4).

Table 4 Type of activity by potential. 

Comunidad San Juan San Luises
Actividades Cultivo de maguey y producción de mezcal Tejidos a ganchillo Tejidos combinados Mango Coco Cría de ganado bovinos-leche y elaboración de quesos
Tipo de actividad por potencial Medioambiental M-P M-P M-P M-P M-P M-P
Material P P P M-P M P
Productivo M P M-P M-P M-P M
Financiero P P M-P M-P M-P P
Capital humano P P M-P M-P M-P P
Capital social P P M-P M-P M-P P
Resumen P P M-P M-P M-P P
Tipo de actividad Valor
Potencial P
Motor M
Motor-potencial M-P

Source: authors’ elaboration.

An example of this is found in the San Luises, where the agricultural production of mango and coconut is surmised to have better perspectives, given that in addition to having positive characteristics for the development in each one of the dimensions analyzed, they have been strengthened by mechanisms of federal and state government support, in addition to organizational initiatives of territorial nature.

These same elements are defining factors of differentiation inside the territory and the activities. In Table 4 we recognize that the activities are positioned in the territory according to the impact found by programs of support or promotion, as well as by territorial initiatives, resulting in the combined knits, the mango and coconut production modifies the value that they have for the territory since they have, specifically, with greater or lesser impact on the mechanisms mentioned. Although they are all considered as activities of motor-potential type, the behavior they present in terms of the impact makes them different.

Being able to reveal the behavior of the economic activities and their potentials, and being able to take them into account in the design and implementation of the proposals for attention towards the territories, allows a public policy of more pertinence, since we may differentiate which territories require attention, as well as which aspects and in a hierarchical manner. Although the center of attention of this exercise refers to economic activities, the dimensions involved contemplate the possibility of reconciling with the strengthening proposals for an integral territorial development.

Conclusions

Once the study was carried out, the methodological plan proposed proved being capable of revealing information about the initiatives that are implemented in the territories, going beyond the mere inventory character of the beneficiaries for each institution or program present, in addition to providing information about the patterns and participation profiles of the actors. Likewise, it was possible to detect the relationships between dimensions, that is, the aspects addressed (social, economic, infrastructure, etc.) and to identify the character of the figures of development management.

The methodology made up of dimensions and indicators of analysis is an instrument that is considered capable of evidencing more specific elements that are part of the context or potential to be developed in the territories.

The incorporation of the information from the interviews as one of the fundamental instruments resulted in the possibility of serving as a contrasting point between public information and the reality of the communities. The territorial dimensions as axes of analysis allow proposals both of analysis and of design that are more inclusive, since they gather detailed information from the territories contributing greater elements to the determination of the design, implementation and evaluation of the public policies applied.

Observation through the productive activities under this plan allows differentiating the conditions in which they are or those from the territory where they are found. With the proposal of the territorial approach based on the analysis by dimensions (environmental, material, etc.) as transversal axes, it is accepted to establish criteria to promote more inclusive and broad relations of the territories that exceed productive vocations or urban hierarchies, for example.

Specifically, the development of this research recognizes in the programs of support and rural promotion a contribution that does not manage to develop completely their potential, with an impact that is not only lower, but which causes imbalances in the productive structure and in the territory as a whole. With the application of the approach of territorial economic development to the methodological proposal, the need to generate synergies between the different areas of the public policy that impact a territory is shown.

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1The economies of natural resources and transformation of natural resources are called by Rafael Echeverry as those based on agriculture, livestock production, fishing, mining, agroecotourism and environmental services in the first case, and craftsmanship and agroindustry as those of transformation. Echeverri, in Sepúlveda, Rodríguez, Echeverri and Portilla (2003).

2The concept of socio-spatial interaction used here is different from the classical concept of spatial interaction developed by economic geography since the 19th century. The models of spatial interaction stricto sensu refer to the study of the effective flows that are established between territorial units in the course of a period of time and tend to be related to a set of position models that describe, not the relationships between two places, but rather the relative position of a place with regards to the others. In our case, to the element of spatial accessibility implicit in the interaction process in a territory or between territories we add the endogenous dynamic value that social, community, productive, institutional, governmental, etc., organizations have, as a potential factor of the territory or the region in question.

3It should be clarified that in addition to the programs for support and rural promotion, the programs of assistance are also considered. Although the objectives of the programs of assistance are directed at other purposes, their results presumably imply an impact on the rural economies, for which they cannot be excluded, in addition to being a factor that impacts the organization of the actors, insofar as the generation of human capital.

4According to calculations by the National Population Council (Consejo Nacional de Población, CONAPO) for the year 2010.

Received: February 01, 2016; Accepted: December 01, 2016

*Author for correspondence.

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