The emergence of a truly global economy in the 1970s and the need
to understand the subsequent changes in economic structure provided
the impetus for this synthesis of the sociology of agriculture. The
book offers the first formulations of a political economy theory
that explains the transnational social and production relations of
food and agriculture. Drawing upon studies of labour, technology,
the state and gender, the contributors put forward a basis for
reassessing and restating the intellectual framework of
agriculture.
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