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The state and rural societies: policy and education in Europe, 1750-2000
Francisco José Medina Albaladejo
Investigaciones de Historia Económica = Economic History Research, ISSN 1698-6989, Vol. 7, Nº. 2, 2011, págs. 345-346
Rural societies are conventionally thought to be bound by tradition and resistant to change. But from the 18th century onwards many countries began to see the countryside as the basis of national prosperity, with a healthy and increasing population, and rising agricultural output fostering general economic growth. It became an objective of the State to encourage the trend, but also to exert social control on this major part of the population in order to civilize the rude peasantry and acquire their electoral support.
págs. 11-34
págs. 35-56
The invertions of the French State in Rural Society: The Major Concerns of the State, Mid-18th Mid-20th century
págs. 57-76
págs. 77-94
Collective Agricultural Practices an the French State: Aspects of the rural Code in France from the 18 th to the 20th Century
págs. 95-110
Landowners, Technicians and Associations: the Formation of the Agricultural Public Institutions in Spain, 1847-1936
págs. 111-134
Research and extension in political context: rural unrest and the origins of the Prussian Chambers of agriculture
págs. 135-158
págs. 159-176
Farm policy under the Salazar and Franco Dictatorships in Portugal and Spain: Towards au Authoritarian Model of intervention in agriculture?
págs. 177-194
Advanced Farming and Professional Training: the First Hungarian College of Farming
págs. 195-214
págs. 215-230
From private initiative to State Intervention: the origins of public agricultural education in Italy
págs. 231-246
págs. 247-258
págs. 259-274
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