Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-2l2gl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-02T04:18:47.543Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A Agricultura em Tempo Parcial na America Latina e a Industrializacao*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Extract

Creio ser bastante oportuna a inclusão da presente tese na agenda do XX Congresso Internacional de Sociologia. A maioria dos vinte países que constituem a América Latina se industrializa rapidamente e, como conseqüéncia dessa industrialização, está surgindo a figura do agricultor em tempo parcial. Obviamente não temos aínda o fenômeno com aquela tipicidade que encontramos na América do Norte e em outros paízes altamente industrializados, onde a pessoa do part-time farmer possue urn status econômico-social e urna tipología bem distinta, a tal ponto que o Censo Norte-Americano — desde 1940 — vem incluindo ñas suas alíneas, devidamente conceituadas, a figura do agricultor em tempo parcial. É oportuno também ser ressaltado que a classe dos part-time farmers aumenta de ano para ano nos paízes industrializados e naquêles que se industrializam. Êsse aumento se processa quantitativa e qualitativamente, a tal ponto que os sociólogos, economistas e demais dentistas sociais começaram a se preocupar com o fenômeno.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Miami 1964

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

O presente trabalho foi escrito especialmente para o XX Congresso Internacional de Sociologia, que deveria-se realizar em Cordoba, Argentina, entre 12 a 18 de setembro de 1962. Com a mudanca desse Congresso para 1963, resolvemos publicar este estudo no Journal of Inter-American Studies.

References

Bibliografia

Daugherty, M. M., “Part-Time Fanning in New Castle County, Delaware”, Bulletin No. 199, Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Delaware, Newark, April, 1936.Google Scholar
Donohue, George A., “Socio-Economic Characteristics of Part-Time and Full-Time Farmers in the Twin Cities Area,” Reprinted from Journal of Farm Economics, XXXIX, November, 1957.Google Scholar
Douglas, George A. and Mackie, Arthur B., Some Social and Economic Implications of Part-Time Farming, Tennessee Valley Authority, Report No. T 57-1 AE, June, 1957.Google Scholar
Galloway, Robert E., “Part-Time Farming in Eastern Kentucky”, Bulletin No. 646, Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Kentucky, June, 1956.Google Scholar
B. L., and Hummel, R. B., Part-Time Farming in Virginia, Blacksburg, Virginia Polytechnic Institute, 1938.Google Scholar
Kuhlman, G. W., Flippin, T. J., Niederfrank, E. J., “Part-Time Farming in Oregon”, Station Bulletin 340, Agricultural Experiment Station, Oregon State College, June, 1935.Google Scholar
Metzler, William H. and Armentrout, W. W., “Farming, Farm People, and Farm Expansion in Fayette, Raleigh, and Summers Counties, West Virginia, 1958,” West Virginia AES Bulletin No. 439, December, 1959.Google Scholar
Morrison, R. L. and Sitterley, J. H., “Rural Homes for Non-Agricultural Workers — A Survey of Their Agricultural Activities,” Bulletin No. 574, Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station, Wooster, Ohio.Google Scholar
Oyler, Merton and Rose, W. W., “Part-Time Farming in Four Representative Areas of Kentucky”. Bulletin No. 358, Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station, August, 1935.Google Scholar
Oyler, Merton, “Part-Time Farming by Negroes Near Lexington, Kentucky,” Bulletin No. 365, Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Kentucky, September, 1936.Google Scholar
Porter, W. F. and Metzler, W. H., “Availability for Employment of Rural People in the Upper Monongahela Valley, West Virginia”, Bulletin No. 391, West Virginia University Agricultural Experiment Station, June, 1956.Google Scholar
Reuss, Carl F., “Social Characteristics of Part-Time Farmers in Washington,” Bulletin No. 380, Rural Sociology Series in Population, July, 1939.Google Scholar