California Agriculture
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California Agriculture
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Of men and machines: Technological change and people in agriculture Part II: Changes in hired farm labor and in rural communities

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Authors

Ann Foley Scheuring, Department of Applied Behavioral Sciences, U.C., Davis
Orville E. Thompson, Department of Applied Behavioral Sciences, U.C., Davis

Publication Information

California Agriculture 34(2):7-9.

Published February 01, 1980

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Abstract

Not only have changes occurred in the way farms and farm families are run (see January 1980 issue of California Agriculture), but there have been dramatic changes within a single generation in the handling of hired labor (there is less need for it) and in the composition of rural communities (more Spanish-speaking residents are settling down, particularly in the Central Valley). This is the last of two articles on the subject.

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Of men and machines: Technological change and people in agriculture Part II: Changes in hired farm labor and in rural communities

Ann Foley Scheuring, Orville E. Thompson
Webmaster Email: sjosterman@ucanr.edu

Of men and machines: Technological change and people in agriculture Part II: Changes in hired farm labor and in rural communities

Share using any of the popular social networks Share by sending an email Print article
Share using any of the popular social networks Share by sending an email Print article

Authors

Ann Foley Scheuring, Department of Applied Behavioral Sciences, U.C., Davis
Orville E. Thompson, Department of Applied Behavioral Sciences, U.C., Davis

Publication Information

California Agriculture 34(2):7-9.

Published February 01, 1980

PDF  |  Citation  |  Permissions

Author Affiliations show

Abstract

Not only have changes occurred in the way farms and farm families are run (see January 1980 issue of California Agriculture), but there have been dramatic changes within a single generation in the handling of hired labor (there is less need for it) and in the composition of rural communities (more Spanish-speaking residents are settling down, particularly in the Central Valley). This is the last of two articles on the subject.

Full text

Full text is available in PDF.

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