Food Power

Food Power
Author: Bryan L. McDonald
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 265
Release: 2017
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0190600683

Food Power brings together the history of food, agriculture, and foreign policy to explore the use of food to promote American national security and national interests during the first three decades of the Cold War.

Agriculture and The World Trade Organisation

Agriculture and The World Trade Organisation
Author: G. S. Bhalla, Jean-Luc Racine, Frédéric Landy
Publisher: Les Editions de la MSH
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2008-05-05
Genre:
ISBN: 2735113787

The volume offers to the reader a multi-faceted dialogue between noted experts from two major agricultural countries, both founding members of the Word Trade Organisation, each one with different stakes in the great globalisation game. After providing the recent historical background of agricultural policies in India and France, the contributors address burning issues related to market and regulation, food security and food safety, the expected benefits from the WTO and the genuine problems raised by the new forms of international trade in agriculture, including the sensitive question of intellectual property rights in bio-technologies. This informed volume underlines the necessity of moving beyond the North-South divide, in order to address the real challenges of the future.

Agricultural Policy of the United States

Agricultural Policy of the United States
Author: Stephanie A. Mercier
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 439
Release: 2020-04-01
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 3030364526

This book serves as a foundational reference of U.S. land settlement and early agricultural policy, a comprehensive journey through the evolution of 20th century agricultural policy, and a detailed guide to the key agricultural policy issues of the early 21st century. This book integrates the legal, economic and political concepts and ideas that guided U.S. agricultural policy from colonial settlement to the 21st century, and it applies those concepts to the policy issues agriculture will face over the next generation. The book is organized into three sections. Section one introduces the main themes of the book, explores the pre-Columbian period and early European settlement, and traces the first 150 years of U.S. agricultural policy starting with the post revolution period and ending with the “golden age” of agriculture in the early 20th century. Section two outlines that grand bargain of the 1930s that initiated the modern era of government intervention into agricultural markets and traces this policy evolution to the early days of the 21st century. The third section provides an in-depth examination of six policy issues that dominate current policy discussions and will impact policy decisions for the next generation: trade, environment/conservation, commodity checkoff programs, crop insurance, biofuels, and domestic nutrition programs.

Agriculture in Capitalist Europe, 1945–1960

Agriculture in Capitalist Europe, 1945–1960
Author: Carin Martiin
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 303
Release: 2016-06-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 1315465922

In the years before the Second World War agriculture in most European states was carried out on peasant or small family farms using technologies that relied mainly on organic inputs and local knowledge and skills, supplying products into a market that was partly local or national, partly international. The war applied a profound shock to this system. In some countries farms became battlefields, causing the extensive destruction of buildings, crops and livestock. In others, farmers had to respond to calls from the state for increased production to cope with the effects of wartime disruption of international trade. By the end of the war food was rationed when it was obtainable at all. Only fifteen years later the erstwhile enemies were planning ways of bringing about a single agricultural market across much of continental western Europe, as farmers mechanised, motorized, shed labour, invested capital, and adopted new technologies to increase output. This volume brings together scholars working on this period of dramatic technical, commercial and political change in agriculture, from the end of the Second World War to the emergence of the Common Agricultural Policy in the early 1960s. Their work is structured around four themes: the changes in the international political order within which agriculture operated; the emergence of a range of different market regulation schemes that preceded the CAP; changes in technology and the extent to which they were promoted by state policy; and the impact of these political and technical changes on rural societies in western Europe.

The Common Agricultural Policy

The Common Agricultural Policy
Author: Wyn Grant
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 256
Release: 1997-06-30
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1349257311

This book offers a comprehensive analysis of the Common Agricultural Policy which imposes high costs on taxpayers and consumers yet has proved very difficult to reform. Particular emphasis is placed on new developments affecting the shape of the CAP, including the outcome of the GATT Uruguay Round negotiations, Eastern enlargement, and developments in environmental policy. A distinctive feature of the book is the attention given to situating European agriculture within its global context and in relation to the food processing and agricultural supply industries.

Japan's Agricultural Policy Regime

Japan's Agricultural Policy Regime
Author: Aurelia George Mulgan
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 258
Release: 2006
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0415366666

This book charts the changes in Japanese agricultural policy in the post-war period and looks at the level at which such policy is designed by the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries to protect its own interventionist powers

The Fault Lines of Farm Policy

The Fault Lines of Farm Policy
Author: Jonathan Coppess
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
Total Pages: 504
Release: 2018-12-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1496212541

At the intersection of the growing national conversation about our food system and the long-running debate about our government’s role in society is the complex farm bill. American farm policy, built on a political coalition of related interests with competing and conflicting demands, has proven incredibly resilient despite development and growth. In The Fault Lines of Farm Policy Jonathan Coppess analyzes the legislative and political history of the farm bill, including the evolution of congressional politics for farm policy. Disputes among the South, the Great Plains, and the Midwest form the primordial fault line that has defined the debate throughout farm policy’s history. Because these regions formed the original farm coalition and have played the predominant roles throughout, this study concentrates on the three major commodities produced in these regions: cotton, wheat, and corn. Coppess examines policy development by the political and congressional interests representing these commodities, including basic drivers such as coalition building, external and internal pressures on the coalition and its fault lines, and the impact of commodity prices. This exploration of the political fault lines provides perspectives for future policy discussions and more effective policy outcomes.

War, Agriculture, and Food

War, Agriculture, and Food
Author: Paul Brassley
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2012
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0415522161

This volume of essays examines one of the crucial periods in the evolution of the European rural economy and society, assessing the effects of the Second World War on the European countryside, and the impact of food and agricultural problems on the outcome of the war.

Postwar Agricultural Policy

Postwar Agricultural Policy
Author: Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges. Committee on Postwar Agricultural Policy
Publisher:
Total Pages: 68
Release: 1944
Genre: Agriculture
ISBN: