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Cultural evolution and small-scale farming
Small-scale farmers are defined under United States Department
of Agriculture guidelines as those whose gross farm sales are less
than 100,000, and with large-scale
farmers whose sales are more than $100,000. Arguments from cultural
and historical sources are cited to show that in fact only two
cultural traditions may be distinguished: family farmers and
industrial farmers. Furthermore, these two traditions represent
contemporary examples of specific and general trends in cultural
evolution.
The small-scale or family farm tradition is examined at length,
based on results from the 1978 Small Farm Project interviews in Polk
County, Oregon, and on the author's subsequent survey in 1985, as
well as other published sources. The salient features of the small-scale
farming lifeway, including its perceived strengths and
weaknesses, is presented and recommendations are advanced for ways
in which small farm communities may be helped to survive or even
thrive in the presence of apparent dominance by large-scale,
industrial farms