Family Farmers, Land Reforms and Political Action
An Alternative Economic History of Interwar Europe
Series: Palgrave Studies in Economic History;
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Product details:
- Edition number 2024
- Publisher Springer Nature Switzerland
- Date of Publication 28 August 2024
- Number of Volumes 1 pieces, Book
- ISBN 9783031672804
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages269 pages
- Size 210x148 mm
- Language English
- Illustrations XVI, 269 p. 1 illus. Illustrations, black & white 591
Categories
Long description:
This book examines how European farmers responded to the economic and political challenges created by the First World War and the Great Depression. The difficulties of interwar Europe have been frequently explored, but rarely from the perspective of the agricultural sector, where two-fifths of the population earned their livelihood, mostly as small, family farmers.
The traditional literature argues that the landed elites conspired to undermine many of Europe's young democracies after the Great War. This book shows instead that by the early 1920s most had either sold their land or seen it confiscated following the widespread land reforms of Eastern Europe, leaving the family farm as the dominant unit of production. The book advances several theories that place the family farmer at the heart of change and explores why some proved to be enthusiastic supporters of liberal democracy, while others preferred political ideologies as diverse as social democracy in Scandinavia or fascism in Germany and Italy. It explores the nuanced and evolving links between family farms and government interests, showing how this relationship varied in different countries and contexts across Western and Central Europe. The book discusses the impact of family farms on agricultural market trends, the influence of collective action on government policies, and the increasing politicization of farmers and rural populations more broadly. The book also sheds light on how agrarian problems and their solutions differed in industrial, agrarian, and transforming societies in interwar Europe. This book will be an illuminating read for scholars of economic history, comparative history and European history interested in agriculture and rural communities.
MoreTable of Contents:
Introduction.- Chapter 1. Agriculture and the Pursuit of Economic Growth.- Chapter 2. Farmers and the Dynamics of Agricultural Change in Interwar Europe.- Chapter 3. Agriculture and the State.- Chapter 4. When did the Landed Elites Give up Power? A European Perspective.- Chapter 5. Land Reform and Farming in Interwar Europe- Chapter 6. Family Farmers: from Cooperatives and Voluntary Associations to Political Parties.- Chapter 7. Farm Labourers.- Chapter 8. The Great Depression.- Chapter 9. Farmers and Politics in Interwar Europe.- Chapter 10. Conclusions.
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