Small Farms

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A01=Alessandro Bonanno
Advanced Western Countries
Advanced Western Societies
agrarian ideology
agricultural development
agricultural policy analysis
agricultural sociology
Author_Alessandro Bonanno
Category=JHB
Coltivatori Diretti
Dominant Social Bloc
EEC Agricultural Policy
EEC Country
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Farm Enterprise
farm family dynamics
Farm Family Members
Farm Life
Farm Policies
Farm Program Payments
land tenure systems
Large Capitalist Farms
Large Farm Sector
legitimation fosters
marginal farm persistence in Western societies
marginal farms
Mature Capitalist Societies
Napoleon III
Net Farm Income
Processes Aoes
rural livelihoods
Small Farm Sector
Small Farms
Socio-economic Development
Southern Underdevelopment
Total Agricultural Sales
Total Family Income
West Germany

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367302863
  • Weight: 450g
  • Dimensions: 149 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 May 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Why do small farms continue to coexist with ever-larger farming operations in advanced Western societies? Through a thorough case study of Italy and a comparative analysis of small farms in the United States, Dr. Bonanno seeks to answer this question, exploring the complex relationships among farm family members’ ideology and behavior, the small farm economic sector, and the interaction of small farms within the relevant spheres of society. He finds that, at the structural level, a lack of occupational alternatives and contradictions within both labor and land markets often force farmers to retain marginal farms despite personal dissatisfaction. At the ideological level, many farm families display deep attachment to the agrarian way of life and cite this as a fundamental reason for not leaving the farm for other work. Dr. Bonanno also analyzes the role of small farms within the social system and concludes that they serve a legitimative function. This legitimative role fosters contradictions within the social and economic systems that the state is unable to resolve, thus contributing to the continuation of a dual structure in agricultural development-Ö¾large and very large farms at one end of the scale and marginal but persistent small farms at the other.
Dr. Alessandro Bonanno is assistant professor of rural sociology at the University of Missouri—Columbia. After undergraduate and graduate work at the University of Messina, Italy, he obtained master’s and doctor’s degrees in sociology at the University of Kentucky.

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