2,986 research outputs found
THE ETHICS OF CONSTRAINED CHOICE: HOW THE INDUSTRIALIZATION OF AGRICULTURE IMPACTS FARMING AND FARMER BEHAVIOR
The industrialization of agriculture not only alters the ways in which agricultural production occurs, but also impacts the decisions farmers make in important ways. First, constraints created by the economic environment of farming limit what options a farmer has available to him. Second, because of the industrialization of agriculture and the resulting economic pressures it creates for farmers, the fact that decision are constrained creates new ethical challenges for farmers. Having fewer options when faced with severe economic pressures is a very different situation for farmers than having many options available. We discuss the implications of constrained choice and show that it increases the likelihood that farmers will consider unethical behavior.Farm Management, Institutional and Behavioral Economics,
Are Farmers of the Middle Distinctively “Good Stewards?” Evidence from the Missouri Farm Poll, 2006
In this paper we consider the question of whether middle-scale farmers, which we define as producers generating between 250,000 in sales annually, are better agricultural stewards than small and large-scale producers. Our study is motivated by the argument of some commentators that farmers of this class ought to be protected in part because of the unique attitudes and values they possess regarding what constitutes a “good farmer”. We present results of a survey of Missouri farmers designed to assess farmer attitudes and values regarding a variety of indicators of farmer stewardship, such as the most important issues in agriculture, environment and treatment of farm animals, perspectives on the past and future of agriculture, and ethical behavior. We find no evidence that farmers-of-the-middle are particularly noteworthy in these regards. We do find evidence, however, that middle-scale farmers are more pessimistic and anxious about their role in the future of agriculture.Farmers of the middle, good farmer, agrarianism, farmer attitudes and values, Environmental Economics and Policy,
Does the World Need U.S. Farmers Even if Americans Don’t?
We consider the implications of trends in the number of U.S. farmers and food imports on the question of what role U.S. farmers have in an increasingly global agrifood system. Our discussion stems from the argument some scholars have made that American consumers can import their food more cheaply from other countries than it can produce it. We consider the distinction between U.S. farmers and agriculture and the effect of the U.S. food footprint on developing nations to argue there might be an important role for U.S. farmers, even if it appears Americans don’t need them. For instance, we may need to protect U.S. farmland and, by implication, U.S. farmers, for future food security needs both domestic and international. We also explore the role of U.S. farmers by considering the question of whether food is a privilege or a right. Although Americans seem to accept that food is a privilege, many scholars and commentators argue that, at least on a global scale, food is a right, particularly for the world’s poor and hungry. If this is the case, then U.S. farmers might have a role in meeting the associated obligation to ensure that the poor of the world have enough food to eat. We look at the consequences of determining that food is a right versus a privilege and the implications of that decision for agricultural subsidies as well as U.S. agriculture and nutrition policies.Food Security and Poverty,
The effect of uniaxial pressure on the magnetic anisotropy of the Mn_{12}-Ac single-molecule magnet
We study the effect of uniaxial pressure on the magnetic hysteresis loops of
the single-molecule magnet Mn_{12}-Ac. We find that the application of pressure
along the easy axis increases the fields at which quantum tunneling of
magnetization occurs. The observations are attributed to an increase in the
molecule's magnetic anisotropy constant D of 0.142(1)%/kbar. The increase in D
produces a small, but measurable increase in the effective energy barrier for
magnetization reversal. Density-functional theory calculations also predict an
increase in the barrier with applied pressure.Comment: version accepted by EPL; 6 pages, including 7 figures. Small changes
and added reference
Complete genome sequences of three novel Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25 bacteriophages, Noxifer, Phabio, and Skulduggery
Three novel bacteriophages, two of which are jumbophages, were isolated from compost in Auckland, New Zealand. Noxifer, Phabio, and Skulduggery are double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) phages with genome sizes of 278,136 bp (Noxifer), 309,157 bp (Phabio), and 62,978 bp (Skulduggery)
More Evidence for a Distribution of Tunnel Splittings in Mn-acetate
In magnetic fields applied parallel to the anisotropy axis, the magnetization
of Mn has been measured in response to a field that is swept back and
forth across the resonances corresponding to steps . The fraction
of molecules remaining in the metastable well after each sweep through the
resonance is inconsistent with expectations for an ensemble of identical
molecules. The data are consistent instead with the presence of a broad
distribution of tunnel splittings. A very good fit is obtained for a Gaussian
distribution of the second-order anisotropy tunneling parameter . We show that dipolar shuffling is a negligible effect which cannot
explain our data.Comment: minor corrections (PACS nos, signs in Fig. 2
Power, Food and Agriculture: Implications for Farmers, Consumers and Communities
agriculture casp farmers food powerOne of the most pressing concerns about the industrialization of agriculture and food is the consolidation and concentration of markets for agricultural inputs, agricultural commodities food processing and groceries. In essence a small minority of actors globally exercise great control over food system decisions. This means that because of increased consolidation of these markets globally – from the United States to China to Brazil, from South Africa to the United Kingdom – the vast majority of farmers, consumers and communities are left out of key decisions about how we farm and what we eat. Transnational agrifood firms are motivated by profits and power in the marketplace, leaving other social, economic and ecological goals behind. This creates an agroecological crisis in the face of climate uncertainty but one that is rooted in social and economic organization. In this chapter we detail the current economic organization of agriculture, and briefly describe its negative impacts on farmers, communities and ecology. We conclude by articulating stories of farmer-led resistance that imagine a new food system
Non-equilibrium Magnetization Dynamics in the Fe_8 Single-Molecule Magnet Induced by High-Intensity Microwave Radiation
Resonant microwave radiation applied to a single crystal of the molecular
magnet Fe_8 induces dramatic changes in the sample's magnetization. Transitions
between excited states are found even though at the nominal system temperature
these levels have negligible population. We find evidence that the sample heats
significantly when the resonance condition is met. In addition, heating is
observed after a short pulse of intense radiation has been turned off,
indicating that the spin system is out of equilibrium with the lattice.Comment: Version to appear in Europhysics Letters. Minor changes and updated
reference
Asymmetric Berry-Phase Interference Patterns in a Single-Molecule Magnet
A Mn4 single-molecule magnet displays asymmetric Berry-phase interference
patterns in the transverse-field (HT) dependence of the magnetization tunneling
probability when a longitudinal field (HL) is present, contrary to symmetric
patterns observed for HL=0. Reversal of HL results in a reflection of the
transverse-field asymmetry about HT=0, as expected on the basis of the
time-reversal invariance of the spin-orbit Hamiltonian which is responsible for
the tunneling oscillations. A fascinating motion of Berry-phase minima within
the transverse-field magnitude-direction phase space results from a competition
between noncollinear magnetoanisotropy tensors at the two distinct Mn sites.Comment: 4 double-column page
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