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Figure 3.6 Cooperative Candelaria,
Un Nuevo Amanecer. Courtesy of the authors. At the end of the war, the abandoned coffee estates (shown at the top of the figure) were more forest than farm, as indicated by the serpent toward the upper right corner, the broken coffee branches toward the upper left one, and notations such as "propiedad destruida" (destroyed property) and "vosque destruido" [sic] (destroyed forest). In the late 1980s, militant campesinos founded the cooperative and claimed 322 hectares of the now-rundown coffee estates in 1992. On the map, several properties are labeled "propiedad de la cooperativa" ("property of the cooperative") and the acreage of each is given. Other processes also contributed to the changed landscape. Closer to town, a number of properties were broken up into smallholdings, evident if one compares the two maps. Two properties were distributed to residents in the early 1980s under the "land-to-the-tiller" phase of the agrarian reform; one is labeled "parcelas de FINATA," and the other simply "FINATA," which refer to the acronym of the administering agency. Others were subdivided into lots when landlords sold land to pay off accumulating debts. Some families could afford to buy land as a result of cash transfers from relatives in San Salvador, provincial towns, or the United States. The subdivision of property among heirs also contributed to the proliferation of smallholdings. click a quadrant for enlargement ![]() |
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