
Socioeconomic and Environmental Impacts on Agriculture in the New Europe
Post-Communist Transition and Accession to the European Union
- 224 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Socioeconomic and Environmental Impacts on Agriculture in the New Europe
Post-Communist Transition and Accession to the European Union
About this book
This book looks at agriculture and the environment, placed within the dynamic context of post-communist societal change and entry into the European Union (EU). Scrieciu explores developments in eleven Central and Eastern European (CEE) countries and argues for agriculture's natural place in these societies. The history of these countries is significant in how it has shaped the institutions and influenced the outcomes.
In many cases, during communism, agriculture was not considered a strategically. An ecological consciousness did not figure high on the agendas of authoritarian regimes. After 1990, some post-communist farm economies progressed slower than others, and environmental pressures mostly diminished with agricultural restructuring. In parts of CEE, increases in numbers of low-input small farms have resulted in some, though largely unintended, ecological benefits. A dual environmental challenge has nevertheless surfaced. On one hand, environmentally unsustainable practices have been attributed to some low-input farming. On the other hand, risks of farm over-intensification and resource overexploitation are on the rise. Also, environmental regulatory and institutional frameworks are not always effectively in place.
EU membership is not creating the anticipated benefits for farm growth. There are a number of systemic structural barriers preventing many farmers from drawing on Common Agricultural Policy incentives and support. The presence of many vulnerable poor farms is clearly problematic, particularly economically. However, small-scale farms could be made more acceptable and profitable by ensuring EU policies acknowledge their value and by building institutions to support alternative farm growth strategies, aside from the traditional European model of individual corporate farm expansion. The voluntary uptake of grassroots rural cooperation and farm associations may represent such an alternative. Future European farm policy reforms need to reach the small and vulnerable, and better tackle issues of farm equity, poverty, and agricultural sustainability in the new Europe. This is a timely contribution as this type of "transition" has just begun. This book should be of use to students and researchers looking at agricultural and environmental economics, post-communist rural societal change, European integration and the Common Agricultural Policy.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Halftitle
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- 1. Introduction A development issue
- 2. A story of communism and rural societies
- 3. Post-communist economic dynamics of agricultural systems
- 4. Transition and transformations in the agricultureānature nexus
- 5. Common Agricultural Policy reforms and European Union enlargement
- 6. European Union integration implications for farm economies in Central and Eastern Europe
- 7. Environmental impacts of accession to the Common Agricultural Policy
- 8. Small-scale vulnerable farms and agricultural cooperation
- 9. Conclusions and a possible way ahead
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index