Investments in Brazilian Agriculture: Alternative Estimates from 1980 to 1998
In: Revista de economia e sociologia rural: Brazilian review of agricultural economics and rural sociology, Band 40, Heft 4
ISSN: 0103-2003
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In: Revista de economia e sociologia rural: Brazilian review of agricultural economics and rural sociology, Band 40, Heft 4
ISSN: 0103-2003
In: Histoire & Sociétés Rurales, Band 12, Heft 1, S. 131-147
«Alternative Agriculture ». About a book of Joan Thirsk.
This paper, aroused by the publication of the last book of Joan Thirsk : Alternative Agriculture. . . , is only a very short essay to attract attention on the necessity of a best knowledge of other cultivations and other activities than cereals for alimentation or stock breeding. At the same time, are discussed from several exemples the conclusions of Joan Thirsk. Theses exemples are more particulary the expansion, in the eighteenth century, of mulberries in France in the Nîme's country and the Rhone's valley, the considerable production of barley in England and Scotland, the working for the Scottish kelp, the cultivation of the french flax.
Global land ownership patterns have been shifting in recent decades, as institutional and non-traditional investors redirect capital into rural areas. Such investment is a stimulating alternative for innovative profit-driven land uses that move beyond agriculture. This paper explores how 'new money' economies have created place effects in three rural case studies across the United Kingdom, through concepts of built, natural, social, and economic capital. The case studies are informed by secondary research, site visits, and interviews, providing snapshots of investment impact. They represent diverse transformations in rural land use via new forms of direct investment, active investment, and processes of financing rather than financialisation, with distinct spatial and temporal characteristics. The case studies include new wine production in Kent, England; transforming the Menie Estate into Trump International Golf Links Scotland (TIGLS); and farm diversification in Northern Ireland. The conclusions tell three investment stories, where place effects reflect the dichotomies, contestation, and symbiosis between investors and local contexts. New land uses create place effects where economic potential often conflicts with natural capital impacts, although they foster knowledge creation and exchange. The underlying values of the investors and their navigation of local politics also have key roles to play in shaping the built, natural, social, and economic place effects.
BASE
Global land ownership patterns have been shifting in recent decades, as institutional and non-traditional investors redirect capital into rural areas. Such investment is a stimulating alternative for innovative profit-driven land uses that move beyond agriculture. This paper explores how 'new money' economies have created place effects in three rural case studies across the United Kingdom, through concepts of built, natural, social, and economic capital. The case studies are informed by secondary research, site visits, and interviews, providing snapshots of investment impact. They represent diverse transformations in rural land use via new forms of direct investment, active investment, and processes of financing rather than financialisation, with distinct spatial and temporal characteristics. The case studies include new wine production in Kent, England ; transforming the Menie Estate into Trump International Golf Links Scotland (TIGLS) ; and farm diversification in Northern Ireland. The conclusions tell three investment stories, where place effects reflect the dichotomies, contestation, and symbiosis between investors and local contexts. New land uses create place effects where economic potential often conflicts with natural capital impacts, although they foster knowledge creation and exchange. The underlying values of the investors and their navigation of local politics also have key roles to play in shaping the built, natural, social, and economic place effects.
BASE
In: Etudes rurales: anthropologie, économie, géographie, histoire, sociologie ; ER, Heft 212, S. 154-156
ISSN: 1777-537X
In: Revue de l'organisation responsable: Responsible Organization review, Band 4, Heft 2, S. 59
In: Sustainable Agriculture, S. 495-517
In: Ethnologie française: revue de la Société d'Ethnologie française, Band 53, Heft 1, S. 103-109
ISSN: 2101-0064
In: Policy studies journal: an international journal of public policy, Band 8, Heft 5, S. 772-784
ISSN: 0190-292X
It is suggested that there has been a small shift in US agricultural practices, & more importantly in policy making in this area, toward what can be called organic or alternative agriculture. These policy changes are partially due to triggering devices, exogenous forces that have led to changes in the policy agenda. Two major exogenous factors are reviewed -- the energy "crisis" & environmental factors. Both sets of forces have resulted in farmers beginning to turn to alternative agricultural techniques, in government officials changing their attitudes about alternative agriculture, & new research activities in this direction being undertaken by various government bodies. HA.
In: Policy studies journal: the journal of the Policy Studies Organization, Band 8, Heft 5, S. 772-784
ISSN: 1541-0072
ABSTRACTThis paper suggests that there has been a small shift in American agricultural practices, and more importantly in policy making in this area, toward what can be called organic or alternative agriculture. These policy changes are partially due to triggering devices, exogenous forces that have led to changes in the policy agenda. Two major exogenous factors are reviewed–the energy "crisis" and environmental factors. Both sets of forces have resulted in farmers beginning to turn to alternative agricultural techniques, in government officials changing their attitudes about alternative agriculture, and new research activities in this direction being undertaken by various government bodies.
In: Archives de sciences sociales des religions: ASSR, S. 209-211
ISSN: 1777-5825
In: IEEE technology and society magazine: publication of the IEEE Society on Social Implications of Technology, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 19-25
ISSN: 0278-0097
In: Revista Capital Científico: RCCi, Band 12, Heft 2
ISSN: 2177-4153