Academic literature on the topic 'National Farmers Federation'

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Journal articles on the topic "National Farmers Federation"

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Sizova, Nadezhda Pavlovna. "Features of development of peasant (farming) facilities in the regions of Russia." KANT 38, no. 1 (March 2021): 58–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.24923/2222-243x.2021-38.13.

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The agricultural sector of production is a unique sphere of the national economy, which determines the level and quality of life of the country's population, but largely depends on the level of development and regional characteristics of economic entities, especially small forms of agricultural production – peasant (farm) farms. The article presents the features of the development of peasant (farm) farms in the regions of Russia. Based on the analysis of features of development of peasant (farmer) farms of constituent entities of the Russian Federation grouping the number and share of production data of the farmers identified areas that require a differentiated approach in the implementation of state support.
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Chance, Quentin, Ronan Le Velly, and Frédéric Goulet. "How to influence the trajectory of organic agriculture’s development when you are not in the driver’s seat? The case of the French National Federation of Organic Farming." Open Agriculture 3, no. 1 (December 31, 2018): 632–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/opag-2018-0066.

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Abstract This article describes the actions taken by the National Federation of Organic Farming (FNAB) to try to influence the course of organic agriculture's development in France. This federation wields the strength that accrues from its network of regional associations, but has no direct control over the economic actions of farmers and enterprises in the organic sector. It is trying to influence these actions in three different ways. First, it is drawing up a normative framework, a stabilised discourse about the risks that are linked to the current strong growth of the market and about the economic model and values that it wants to defend in this context. Second, the FNAB tries to affect the ways that the food supply chains are organised by promoting certain production and trade organisation schemes. Third, the FNAB produces information and references to help farmers and economic operators get their market bearings.
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Mello, Ivo, François Laurent, Amir Kassam, Guilherme Fernandes Marques, Cristhiane Michiko Passos Okawa, and Kelly Monte. "Benefits of Conservation Agriculture in Watershed Management: Participatory Governance to Improve the Quality of No-Till Systems in the Paraná 3 Watershed, Brazil." Agronomy 11, no. 12 (December 1, 2021): 2455. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11122455.

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Adoption of best soil and water management practices is desirable for sustainable production intensification. However, farmers have difficulties in adopting them within a system approach to management, missing out on positive results for themselves and for society. A partnership between the Brazilian No-Till Farmers Federation and Itaipu Binacional authority adopted a participatory management strategy, as proposed by the National Water Resources Policy, allowing important decisions regarding the use of water to be made in participatory Watershed Committees, to address such farmers’ difficulties. In this paper, we review the development and application of the Participatory Quality Index approach based on the principles of conservation agriculture to improve the quality of no-till systems in the Paraná 3 watershed within the Cultivating Good Water program. We analyze the available documentation and experiences of the program’s executors, highlighting the results from the perspective of sustainability of multiple uses of water in a watershed.
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Gorshenin, Andrey, and Sergey Gorlov. "State support as a factor of sustainable development of agriculture: world experience and national specifics." IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science 979, no. 1 (February 1, 2022): 012027. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/979/1/012027.

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Abstract The article examines the institutional problems and the results of state support for agriculture and its subjects operating in the EU, the USA and the Russian Federation. Its content indicates that in Western European states, the authorities are directing their efforts to primarily stimulate highly profitable agricultural organizations. Along with them, in the United States, the authorities provide priority support for capital-intensive farms that supply the bulk of food to the market. However, in our country, the state provides preferences, mainly for households that do not have free capital, and for novice farmers engaged in commodity production in an unfavorable natural and climatic environment.
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Barsukov, Y. I. "Veterinary and biological industry on the guard of animal health: modernity and prospects." Legal regulation in veterinary medicine, no. 3 (October 18, 2022): 50–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.52419/issn2782-6252.2022.3.50.

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Ensuring epizootic well-being on the territory of the Russian Federation is an integral part of the concept of national security of the country. In order to implement plans to improve the epizootic situation in the Russian Federation, the National Association of Veterinary and Biological Industry Organizations (Association "Vetbioprom") was established.The strategic goal of the enterprises belonging to the Association "Vetbioprom" is economic stability, the main goals and objectives are the development, improvement and introduction of promising domestic technologies in the field of veterinary medicine and immunobiotechnology, and the creation of new domestic immunobiological drugs for veterinary use.The main goals and objectives of the enterprises that are members of the Vetbioprom Association are the development, improvement and implementation of promising domestic technologies in the field of veterinary medicine and immunobiotechnology, and the creation of new domestic immunobiological drugs for veterinary use.The enterprises belonging to the Vetbioprom Association produce medicines for veterinary use, immunobiological preparations for diagnosing animal diseases, as well as disinfectants for veterinary use.The potential of domestic enterprises, the available capacities today allow to increase production volumes and output for veterinary use by 1.5 2 times. In addition, all enterprises carry out innovative developments in the field of veterinary vaccines and are ready, subject to state support, to bring them into production and provide farmers with replacements for imported analogues.The development of the domestic production of veterinary vaccines will contribute to the achievement of the national development goals of the Russian Federation and the implementation of a set of measures aimed at creating and implementing competitive domestic technologies based on the latest scientific achievements and ensuring the production of highquality medicines and diagnostics for veterinary use.
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Rahmani, Mohamed, and Donald S. Humpal. "Improving the On-farm Productivity and Supply of Capers to Processors in Morocco." HortScience 40, no. 4 (July 2005): 1140B—1140. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.40.4.1140b.

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Morocco is the world's leading caper producer. Its export position has declined as worldwide production increases. Farm gate prices have declined as market prices have diminished. A joint program among the Moroccan Federation of Food Processors (FICOPAM), the Institut Agronomique et Veterinaire Hassan II (IAV Hassan II), and DAI was supported by USAID to examine how to improve industry competitiveness. Field surveys and workshops with farmers, buyers, and processors in Morocco's three main caper growing regions were used to inform a national conference to arrive at a consensus action plan. The plan focuses on a shift from weight-based to grade-based buying practices. Supporting changes were identified to modify on-farm practice; equip and regulate buying floors at major markets; institute minimum traceability requirements; and establish HACCP programs for caper processors in collaboration with Moroccan export authorities. Training programs to support these changes were completed with farmers and extension personnel in 2004.
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Marinchenko, T. E. "Regional Activity in Agriculture Digitalization." IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science 988, no. 3 (February 1, 2022): 032025. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/988/3/032025.

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Abstract The digitalization of production in agriculture is a global trend. The national priorities of modern Russia to be determined by the program documents of the country’s socio-economic development for the period up to 2030 imply the use of the wide possibilities of digital technologies to ensure the entry of the Russian Federation into the largest economies in the world. A departmental project is being implemented within the framework of the Digital Economy national project. Digitalization is identified as an important factor in strategic competitive advantage in the medium term, which is difficult to implement without government support. The regions have been identified that are leaders in the field of digitalization of agricultural production and pay great attention to this process. The experience of these regions can provide investments in the development of other regions, as well as ensure the development and modernization of agricultural enterprises. Therefore, information on successful practices in the application of information technologies should be popularized for wider dissemination among farmers.
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Tiwari, Liladhar. "Financial Status of Small Farmer Cooperative Limited (SFCL) in Surkhet District of Nepal." Journal of Advanced Academic Research 3, no. 1 (February 11, 2017): 37–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/jaar.v3i1.16616.

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The present study has studied the status of Small Farmers Cooperative Limited (SFCL) in Surkhet District of Nepal. The cooperative movement originated from the philosophy of cooperation and later developed as a powerful tool to support to improve socio-economic status of resource poor, vulnerable, members of the lower cast people, women, labors and peasants. The Small Farmers Cooperative Limited functions with the guiding philosophy of group principle, self-help development and institutionalization of networks at the grassroots level to reduce the poverty. SFCL has three tier structures - village level groups, inter-groups and the main committee. This study applied a descriptive and analytical research design in the specific area. Study is based on both primary and secondary sources of data. The primary data are collected through observation and questionnaires and secondary data are collected from District Cooperative Office Surkhet (DCOS), Department of Cooperative (DoC), Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), National Planning Commission (NPC), National Cooperative Federation of Nepal (NCF/N and so on. Some of the most remarkable contributions of these institutions are: saving collection, credit investment and socio-economic improvement. The SFCLs are guided by democratic norms and shares are issued to the members who are empowered with one member one vote for the general assembly purpose. The institutions function for socio-economic development with the strong policy of being apolitical and unbiased with no discrimination of any kind on religion and gender basis. The socio-economic status of cooperative members is changed through income generation. Similarly, in the comparison of expenditure increment before and after membership, an average expense is increased, result is highly significant.
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KUHAR, Viktor, Ekaterina KOT, Olga LORETTS, Olga TEREKHOVA, Aleksey RUCHKIN, and Nadegda YURCHENKO. "Analysis of the Effectiveness of State Support to Farms in Region of Russia. The Case of Sverdlovsk Region." Journal of Environmental Management and Tourism 11, no. 3 (June 16, 2020): 679. http://dx.doi.org/10.14505//jemt.11.3(43).21.

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This article is devoted to the analysis of the effectiveness of the implementation of state agricultural programs, national and priority regional projects to support peasant (farm) farms and rural areas in Sverdlovsk region. Materials and methods: tools and methods of financial assistance, including grants, for peasant (farm) farms in the Sverdlovsk region are analyzed. These mechanisms are used in the implementation of state programs for the development of the agro-industrial complex at the Federal and regional levels. The identified problems of agricultural development allow us not only to formulate recommendations for improving the mechanisms for implementing measures to support farmers, but also to pay attention to aspects that are not taken into account by state programs. The authors relied on statistical, structural, analytical, system, logical, and correlation analysis. The normative legal basis of the study was chosen by the normative legal acts of Russian Federation and Sverdlovsk region, including state programs, national and priority regional projects implemented in the field of agriculture, and official materials of state statistics. Results: the effectiveness of the main instruments of state support for farmers in the region is evaluated, recommendations for improving the mechanisms of support for farmers in Sverdlovsk region are developed, and directions for the development of rural cooperation are proposed. Discussion: the article presents a socio-economic analysis of the support and development of peasant (farm) farms by the state government authorities of Sverdlovsk region. The authors pay special attention to the fact that during the implementation of state programs and projects, certain aspects are not taken into account when evaluating applications for state funding, which were identified by researchers in Estonia and Latvia. Conclusion: it is necessary to regularly assess the effectiveness and then correlate the tools used to support peasant (farm) farms. In order to increase efficiency, it is necessary to apply correlation analysis of statistical data to public authorities and conduct sociological research (in the future).
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Camprubíí, Lino. "One Grain, One Nation: Rice Genetics and the Corporate State in Early Francoist Spain (1939––1952)." Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences 40, no. 4 (2010): 499–531. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/hsns.2010.40.4.499.

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This paper aims to show the links between rice genetics and the corporatist political economy of early Francoism. After investigating the transition from prewar rice producers' associations to a new federation embedded in a vertical union, I identify three main novelties of the new organization: its national scope, its need to address lack of supply rather than overproduction, and its hierarchical functioning. I then focus on the one state-owned agricultural station devoted to rice research, showing how its agricultural scientists shaped, and relied on, the state-controlled unions, both for producing and distributing new varieties of rice and for controlling the seeds farmers used. Finally, I explore how this relationship made it possible for the scientists to test, multiply, and distribute throughout the Spanish landscape the seeds they produced at the laboratory, thus putting hierarchical unity and autarky to work and demonstrating the role of scientists as active agents of state formation and landscape transformation within a corporatist political economy.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "National Farmers Federation"

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Zadnik, Elizabeth, and n/a. "In disunity, weakness." University of Canberra. Management, 1990. http://erl.canberra.edu.au./public/adt-AUC20061112.112712.

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The National Farmers Federation (NFF) is a peak producer organisation. Its executive has purported to represent all Australian farmers with a unified voice. This thesis argues that primary producers are too heterogeneous a group ever to have developed much solidarity in articulation of or action for the furtherance of common interests and that this fact is reflected in the NFF. Heterogeneity results from farm size, product specialisation, level of technology adopted, geographical location and special needs. Successive farm organisations and the National Party (and predecessors) have attempted to encompass these differences since the 1890s. Producer differences either have led to secession or to unification when political and economic circumstances have warranted it. This diversity has prevented farm groups becoming united. The lack of unity at first prevented all farmers joining in one organisation, and when they did, they kept on splitting up. The charisma of Ian McLachlan allowed farmers to get together, but the diversity meant that the getting together benefited some not only without the others, but sometimes at the expense of others. This thesis explores the heterogeneity of the agricultural sector within the political and economic context of Australian agriculture and discusses its consequences, in the constant re-forming of farm organisations and the institutional framework of the NFF in the context of politicisation of agricultural interest groups. This thesis concludes that producer differences in terms of size and product specialisation determine how effectively they are represented. Corporate farmers have fared much better than family and family-plus farmers, who would probably be better represented by a small business organisation, with which they have more in common, rather than a farming organisation.
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Halpin, Darren Richard. "Authenticity and the representative paradox : the political representation of Australian farmers through the NFF family of interest groups /." View thesis View thesis, 1999. http://library.uws.edu.au/adt-NUWS/public/adt-NUWS20030527.163228/index.html.

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Halpin, Darren Richard. "Authenticity and the representative paradox: the political representation of Australian farmers through the NFF family of interest groups." Thesis, View thesis View thesis, 1999. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/22.

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This thesis examines the political representation of Australian farmers. The NFF family of interest groups is charged with the political representation of farmers in Australia.Given that their state affiliates are the only organisations that farmers can directly join, this study takes the case of the New South Wales Farmers' Association (NSWFA) as its major reference point. A paradox is immediately confronted. On one hand, both the state and commentators refer to the NFF family as an exemplar of a successful modern interest group. However, on the other, the NFF family is being confronted with escalating levels of disillusionment and criticism from its own constituency.Two points of interest are highlighted. Firstly, it is suggested that theoretical frameworks, which assist commentators and researchers to come to the conclusion that the NFF family is 'successful', are not constructed in such a fashion as to throw sufficient light on the paradoxical nature of an existing situation. Secondly, this paradox suggests that the NFF itself must be able to disassociate the contingent relationship between its internal levels of support and external levels of access and influence. These two focal points are explored in this thesis, and the framework used by researchers to understand the actions of Australian farm interest groups are scrutinised. Discussing 'authentic' political representation assists considering the major theme of the 'representative paradox'. It is argued that this paradox is best understood by locating it within a search by farmers for authentic political representation - both through the NFF family and apart from it.
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O'Malley, Timothy Rory. "Mateship and Money-Making: Shearing in Twentieth Century Australia." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/5351.

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After the turmoil of the 1890s shearing contractors eliminated some of the frustration from shearers recruitment. At the same time closer settlement concentrated more sheep in small flocks in farming regions, replacing the huge leasehold pastoral empires which were at the cutting edge of wool expansion in the nineteenth century. Meanwhile the AWU succeeded in getting an award for the pastoral industry under the new arbitration legislation in 1907. Cultural and administrative influences, therefore, eased some of the bitter enmity which had made the annual shearing so unstable. Not all was plain sailing. A pattern of militancy re-emerged during World War I. Shearing shed unrest persisted throughout the interwar period and during World War II. In the 1930s a rival union with communist connections, the PWIU, was a major disruptive influence. Militancy was a factor in a major shearing strike in 1956, when the boom conditions of the early-1950s were beginning to fade. The economic system did not have satisfactory mechanisms to cope. Unionised shearers continued to be locked in a psyche of confrontation as wool profits eroded further in the 1970s. This ultimately led to the wide comb dispute, which occurred as wider pressures changed an economic order which had not been seriously challenged since Federation, and which the AWU had been instrumental in shaping. Shearing was always identified with bushworker ‘mateship’, but its larrikinism and irreverence to authority also fostered individualism, and an aggressive ‘moneymaking’ competitive culture. Early in the century, when old blade shearers resented the aggressive pursuit of tallies by fast men engaged by shearing contractors, tensions boiled over. While militants in the 1930s steered money-makers into collectivist versions of mateship, in the farming regions the culture of self-improvement drew others towards the shearing competitions taking root around agricultural show days. Others formed their own contracting firms and had no interest in confrontation with graziers. Late in the century New Zealanders arrived with combs an inch wider than those that had been standard for 70 years. It was the catalyst for the assertion of meritocracy over democracy, which had ruled since Federation.
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O'Malley, Timothy Rory. "Mateship and Money-Making: Shearing in Twentieth Century Australia." University of Sydney, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/5351.

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Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
After the turmoil of the 1890s shearing contractors eliminated some of the frustration from shearers recruitment. At the same time closer settlement concentrated more sheep in small flocks in farming regions, replacing the huge leasehold pastoral empires which were at the cutting edge of wool expansion in the nineteenth century. Meanwhile the AWU succeeded in getting an award for the pastoral industry under the new arbitration legislation in 1907. Cultural and administrative influences, therefore, eased some of the bitter enmity which had made the annual shearing so unstable. Not all was plain sailing. A pattern of militancy re-emerged during World War I. Shearing shed unrest persisted throughout the interwar period and during World War II. In the 1930s a rival union with communist connections, the PWIU, was a major disruptive influence. Militancy was a factor in a major shearing strike in 1956, when the boom conditions of the early-1950s were beginning to fade. The economic system did not have satisfactory mechanisms to cope. Unionised shearers continued to be locked in a psyche of confrontation as wool profits eroded further in the 1970s. This ultimately led to the wide comb dispute, which occurred as wider pressures changed an economic order which had not been seriously challenged since Federation, and which the AWU had been instrumental in shaping. Shearing was always identified with bushworker ‘mateship’, but its larrikinism and irreverence to authority also fostered individualism, and an aggressive ‘moneymaking’ competitive culture. Early in the century, when old blade shearers resented the aggressive pursuit of tallies by fast men engaged by shearing contractors, tensions boiled over. While militants in the 1930s steered money-makers into collectivist versions of mateship, in the farming regions the culture of self-improvement drew others towards the shearing competitions taking root around agricultural show days. Others formed their own contracting firms and had no interest in confrontation with graziers. Late in the century New Zealanders arrived with combs an inch wider than those that had been standard for 70 years. It was the catalyst for the assertion of meritocracy over democracy, which had ruled since Federation.
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Books on the topic "National Farmers Federation"

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United States. General Accounting Office. Accounting and Information Management Division. Federally chartered corporation: Review of the financial statement audit report of the National Future Farmers of America Organization for fiscal year 1997. Washington, D.C. (P.O. Box 37050, Washington, D.C. 20013): The Office, 1998.

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Canada, National Liberal Federation of. Reciprocity and the farmer. [Canada?: s.n., 1995.

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Federally chartered corporation: Review of the financial statement audit report of the National Future Farmers of America Organization for fiscal year 1997. Washington, D.C. (P.O. Box 37050, Washington 20013): The Office, 1998.

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Federally chartered corporation: Review of the financial statement audit report of the National Future Farmers of America Organization for fiscal year 1997. Washington, D.C. (P.O. Box 37050, Washington 20013): The Office, 1998.

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Book chapters on the topic "National Farmers Federation"

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"Deceived." In Union Renegades, edited by Dana M. Caldemeyer, 21–42. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043505.003.0002.

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Chapter 1 examines the grievances many rural farmers and laborers faced, including exploitation, workplace dishonesty, and questionable stock investment procedures in the Gilded Age. Workers cast a wary eye at their bosses, bankers, stockbrokers, lawyers, and government officials, who rural workers viewed as dishonest individuals looking to take advantage of hardworking farmers and laborers. This mistrust at times extended to union organizers and officers of organizations like the Knights of Labor and the National Federation of Miners. When the leaders of these two groups tried to merge to create one large miners’ union, workers wondered whether the union representatives truly cared about the workers’ interests.
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"Appendix J: Secretaries-General of the Mexican Federation of Labor (CTM), National Farmers’ Confederation (CNC), National Federation of Popular Organizations (CNOP), Federation of Government Employees’ Unions (FSTSE), Mexican Petroleum Workers’ Union (STPRM), Union of Electrical Workers of the Mexican Republic (STERM), and National Teachers’ Union (SNTE), 1936–2010." In Mexican Political Biographies, 1935-2009, 1299–302. University of Texas Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.7560/726345-041.

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"Wolves." In Union Renegades, edited by Dana M. Caldemeyer, 139–62. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043505.003.0007.

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Chapter 6 explores the numerous fights between union leaders in the Gilded Age to show that “organized labor” was far from unified. Historians have long noted that these fights, such as those between and within the American Federation of Labor and the Knights of Labor, weakened unions during this period. This chapter, however, argues that the fights between union leadership in the Gilded Age were part of a large but disorganized effort to “purify” labor organizations of corrupt and complacent leadership. The tumult this created tore unions apart, created rival organizations like the Independent Order of the Knights of Labor, and caused workers to doubt which leaders and organizations were trustworthy. This confusion became even more pronounced during the Populist push in the 1896 national election, when rural farmers and laborers, disillusioned with the organizations and individuals who claimed to help them, could not agree on which candidate would best look after their interests.
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Looney, Kristen E. "Rural Development in South Korea, 1950s–1970s." In Mobilizing for Development, 80–116. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501748844.003.0004.

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This chapter explains South Korea's mixed record of rural development. It begins with an overview of rural change in the postwar period and shows that agriculture did not contribute much to the overall economy or to rural household incomes because of an adverse policy environment. The situation improved in the 1970s, with noticeable gains in production, incomes, and infrastructure, although progress was uneven in each of these areas. The chapter then discusses rural institutions and the shift away from urban bias. It argues that agriculture underperformed because land reform was insufficient for long-term growth and because South Korea's rural institutions were relatively weak. The Ministry of Agriculture was low in the bureaucratic hierarchy, and its extension agencies never developed deep roots in society. The National Agricultural Cooperative Federation (NACF) in particular was qualitatively different from its counterpart in Taiwan; it was an appendage of the state that exhibited linkage but not autonomy. Rural policy was implemented in a more rigid, top-down manner, with less participation from small farmers and fewer people advocating on their behalf. The South Korean case illustrates both the strengths and weaknesses of a campaign approach to development. The New Village Movement essentially reset the priorities of every branch of government, temporarily overriding other work.
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Conference papers on the topic "National Farmers Federation"

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Mikhailova, V. V. "RABIES EPISOOTIC SITUATION IN THE CITY OF MOSCOW AND THE MOSCOW REGION IN THE PERIOD FROM 2017 TO 2020." In DIGEST OF ARTICLES ALL-RUSSIAN (NATIONAL) SCIENTIFIC AND PRACTICAL CONFERENCE "CURRENT ISSUES OF VETERINARY MEDICINE: EDUCATION, SCIENCE, PRACTICE", DEDICATED TO THE 190TH ANNIVERSARY FROM THE BIRTH OF A.P. Stepanova. Publishing house of RGAU - MSHA, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.26897/978-5-9675-1853-9-2021-13.

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Rabies is one of the most dangerous and socially significant infectious diseases. The city of Moscow is the largest metropolitan area in the Russian Federation with the largest number of pets and a tense epizootic situation. The city of Moscow is bordered by the large-scale Moscow region, which for many years has been unsuccessful in terms of animal rabies. There is a fairly large livestock sector on the territory of the region: hunting farms, animal complexes, personal subsidiary farms of the population and livestock farms of other forms of ownership.This article presents the results of the analysis of reporting data in the 4-vet form: City Veterinary Laboratory, GBUV MO "Tervet Management No. 4", Zhukovskaya Veterinary Station, GBUV MO "Teruvrashenie No. 3" of Egoryevsk Veterinary Station, GBUV MO "Teruvrashenie No. 2" Sergiev Posadskaya veterinary laboratory and GBUV MO "Terrupravlenie No. 1" of the Ruza veterinary laboratory.
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