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Beach, Richard – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2015
This Commentary posits the need to analyze how the energy/transportation, agricultural/food, and economic/political systems influence climate change through responding to literary "cli-fi" texts, place-based writing, visual representation of the effects of climate change, and drama activities.
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Imagination, Energy, Transportation
Szelenyi, Ivan – Rural Sociology, 2011
This article presents the author's rejoinder to Joachim Singelmann's presidential address on "From Central Planning to Markets." Joachim Singelmann in his presidential address challenged the received wisdom: socialism was doomed to fail; during the market transition all of its basic institutions had to be abolished and replaced by the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Systems, Productivity, Agriculture
Warren, Cat – Academe, 2010
This article presents an interview with Marion Nestle, the New York University food scientist and author of "Food Politics." Marion Nestle is Paulette Goddard Professor in the Department of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health at New York University. From 1986 to 1988, she was senior nutrition policy adviser in the Department of Health and…
Descriptors: Research Universities, Conflict of Interest, Agriculture, Food
Prakash, Madhu Suri – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2010
In this article, the author expresses her view on how urban agriculture can be a source of hope among people particularly the uneducated and undereducated ones. The author shares that urban agriculture is a brilliant answer to the difficulties in these times of crisis. One of its most relevant elements is its impact in education: it allows people…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Agriculture, Fear, Educational Philosophy
Winson, Anthony – Rural Sociology, 2010
To the extent that social science scholarship engages real-world developments it remains grounded and better able to resist elite agendas. With this in mind this article argues for the critical encounter with what I argue is the most significant struggle around food and agriculture today--the amorphous and broad-based movement that strives to…
Descriptors: Nutrition, Agricultural Production, Biochemistry, Foreign Countries
Burawoy, Michael – Rural Sociology, 2009
In his presidential address Jess Gilbert examines two democratic experiments of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) during the New Deal: first, county planning that coordinated federal programs through citizen committees, and second, land redistribution to landless southern farmers, including a small number of black sharecroppers…
Descriptors: Federal Programs, Agriculture, Land Settlement, Relocation
Mooney, Patrick H.; Hunt, Scott A. – Rural Sociology, 2009
This article demonstrates Gamson's claim that behind the apparent agreement implied by "consensus frames" lies considerable dissensus. Ironically, the very potency of consensus frames may generate contested claims to the ownership of a social problem. Food security is a potent consensus frame that has generated at least three distinct collective…
Descriptors: Accidents, Social Problems, Ownership, Risk
Dejong, David H. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2009
The Akimel O'odham, or "River People" (Pima), have lived in the middle Gila River Valley for centuries, irrigating and cultivating the same land as their Huhugam ancestors did for millennia. Continuing their irrigated agricultural economy bequeathed to them by their Huhugam ancestors, the Pima leveraged a favorable geopolitical setting into a…
Descriptors: Free Enterprise System, Political Attitudes, American Indian Culture, American Indians
National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges, 2008
This paper presents Peter McPherson's statement before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He begins by saying that people have an immediate problem that must be addressed, hopefully in a way that does not complicate long-term solutions. They also have a long-term and more complicated agricultural problem that the world has neglected over many…
Descriptors: Food, Crisis Management, Income, Population Growth
Havens, Greg; Chapman, Perry; Irwin, Bryan – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2008
The Morrill Act of 1862, signed by Abraham Lincoln, established the land grant university with a Solomon-like simplicity: the federal government would deed large tracts of land to establish public colleges in each state. These institutions would then train young citizens in agriculture, forestry, mining and the mechanical arts--fields tied…
Descriptors: Educational Facilities Planning, Water, Land Grant Universities, Public Colleges
Soliva, Reto – Journal of Rural Studies, 2007
In many European mountain areas, including the Swiss Alps, agriculture has been on the decline in the last decades. This has led to changes in land use, landscape and biodiversity; changes which are perceived, explained and valued by people in different ways. In this paper, the views of local stakeholders in the Surses valley, Switzerland…
Descriptors: Rural Areas, Agriculture, Land Use, Biodiversity

Montgomery, Florita S.; And Others – Journal of Applied Communications, 1996
Common barriers to publishing include time, type of appointment, funding, methodology intimidation, reward, and logistics. Ways to overcome them include redefining "research," learning methods, gleaning ideas from other publications, collaborating, finding a mentor, and presenting papers. (SK)
Descriptors: Agriculture, Communications, Research, Writing for Publication
Rea, Jennette; And Others – Agricultural Education Magazine, 1989
Discusses women who have made an impact in the agricultural sciences. Profiles Elizabeth Pickney, indigo; Jane Colden, botany; Harriet Strong, irrigation and flood control; Anna Comstock, nature studies; Alice Evans, bacteriology; Edith Patch, entomology; and Beatrix Potter, botany. (JOW)
Descriptors: Agriculture, Biographies, Biological Sciences, Females
Hanson, Jayde; Bell, Martin – Journal of Rural Studies, 2007
Against a background of declining employment in agriculture, a mobile workforce plays a crucial role in meeting seasonal labour demand in Australia. The dynamics of this labour force have received surprisingly little attention. We situate seasonal migration within the rising diversity of present-day mobility, and capture images of its early…
Descriptors: Agriculture, Role, Labor Demands, Foreign Countries

Quilling, Joan I. – Journal of Home Economics, 1982
Postindustrialism often describes societies which deemphasize agriculture and manufacturing while emphasizing information processing. There are five stages to postindustrialization: (1) mining, agriculture; (2) manufactured goods; (3) transportation, communication, public services; (4) commerce; and (5) abstract activities. The United States is in…
Descriptors: Agriculture, Information Processing, Manufacturing, Social Change