Download Free The Future Of British Agriculture Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online The Future Of British Agriculture and write the review.

This book provides a multidisciplinary analysis of the impact of Brexit on British agriculture and associated areas, discussing the Common Agricultural Policy and the Agriculture Act 2020. The Brexit referendum provoked new debates and questions over the future of agriculture in Britain and the potential positive and negative impacts of Brexit on both farmers and consumers. These debates, as well as the ensuing proposals relevant to the Agriculture Act 2020, have exposed the multidimensional effects of Brexit when it comes to agriculture. With a focus on profitability, the rights of farmers, environmental protection, as well as animal welfare, this book brings together an interdisciplinary analysis of the future of British agriculture in post-Brexit Britain. More specifically, it addresses the criticisms over the Common Agriculture Policy, presents an analysis of the Agriculture Act 2020, and considers suggestions for future developments. Through this analysis, the book suggests a way towards the future, with a positive outlook towards a competitive and sustainable agriculture that will satisfy the needs of farmers and consumers while ensuring environmental protection, animal welfare, and rural development. This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of food and agricultural policy and politics, agroecology and rural development, as well as policymakers involved in Britain’s post-Brexit environmental policy.
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1893 edition. Excerpt: ... CHAPTER VIIT. TENANT FARMERS' INTERESTS. The interests of tenant farmers are said to be the interests--closely and directly the interests --of landlords, and of labourers too, to a very considerable extent. In a sentimental sense this may be said to be the case. But tenant farmers' interests more resemble the landlords' than the labourers' in these later times. They are, however--this trinity of interests-- not exactly identical and indivisible, though they correspond and correlate more than some people think. Tenant farmers, in any case, are indispensable to landlords, even more than to labourers; are, in fact, quite as indispensable to them as the labourers are to both. It is obvious that landlords cannot dispense with farmers and manage the land themselves, any more than farmers can dispense with labourers and do the work themselves. Labourers form, at all events, the base and foundation of the pyramid. There are persons, not a few, who say that the landlords themselves are the one personification in the agricultural trinity which could most easily, and with the least interference with national interests, be dispensed with. Landlords can hardly be expected to look at the question in this light, for there is a point in the human mind beyond which the idea of personal obliteration becomes more or less unattractive. Speaking, however, as a landlord in a small way, which is as much to me as a large landlord's large way is to him, I am bound to confess that it is only too clear that my tenants could dispense with me without any serious inconvenience to themselves. The interests of tenants and landlords are, therefore, not identical, but rather concurrent, and farmers are coming to see them in this light. If this identity be non-existent, it..