Food and the Mid-Level Farm: Renewing an Agriculture of the Middle, vol 1
Edited by Thomas A. Lyson,
G. W. Stevenson () and
Rick Welsh ()
in MIT Press Books from The MIT Press
Abstract:
Agriculture in the United States today increasingly operates in two separate spheres: large, corporate-connected commodity production and distribution systems and small-scale farms that market directly to consumers. As a result, midsize family-operated farms find it increasingly difficult to find and reach markets for their products. They are too big to use the direct marketing techniques of small farms but too small to take advantage of corporate marketing and distribution systems. This crisis of the midsize farm results in a rural America with weakened municipal tax bases, job loss, and population flight. Food and the Mid-Level Farm discusses strategies for reviving an "agriculture of the middle" and creating a food system that works for midsize farms and ranches. Activists, practitioners, and scholars from a variety of disciplines, including sociology, political science, and economics, consider ways midsize farms can regain vitality by scaling up aspects of small farms' operations to connect with consumers, organizing together to develop markets for their products, developing food supply chains that preserve farmer identity and are based on fair business agreements, and promoting public policies (at international, federal, state, and community levels) that address agriculture-of-the-middle issues.
Keywords: agriculture of the middle; mid-level farms; rural America (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: Q12 Q13 Q18 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2008
Edition: 1
ISBN: 0-262-62215-7
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:mtp:titles:0262622157
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