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Human Geography: Places and
Regions in Global Context, 5e
Chapter 8: Agriculture and Food Production
Paul L. Knox & Sallie A. Marston
PowerPoint Author: Keith M. Bell
Overview
Today agriculture is a highly complex, globally integrated system. It was not
always that way. Agriculture has gone through three revolutions, each
transforming the practice in major ways. Agriculture of the present is highly
industrialized through the use of mechanization, chemical fertilizers, and through
links to other sectors of the economy such as food processing and
transportation. This chapter explores different kinds of agriculture and the
regions in which each is practiced. Students should be aware of how agricultural
practices in, for example, the tropics and in temperate regions differ from each
other.
Modern agriculture is the major focus of this chapter, especially the process of
industrialization. Students should be aware of these changes. Agriculture is now
part of the world economic system, and hence its economic, social, and
environmental impacts are also global in nature. This process is easy to illustrate
by examining the sources of foods commonly consumed in the United States
and the process by which they reach their final market.
Chapter Objectives
• The objectives of this chapter are to:
– Understand traditional agricultural geography
– Examine the agricultural revolution and its
industrialization
– Investigate the forces of agricultural
globalization
– Explore the social and technological change
in global agricultural restructuring
– Examine the relationship between the
environment and agricultural industrialization
Chapter Outline
• Chapter Outline
• Traditional Agricultural Geography
(p. 298)
– Types of agriculture
– Shifting cultivation
– Intensive subsistence agriculture
– Pastoralism
• Agricultural Revolution and
Industrialization (p. 305)
– First agricultural revolution
– Second agricultural revolution
– Third agricultural revolution
– Industrialization of agriculture
• Global Change in Food Production
and Consumption (p. 315)
– Forces of globalization
– Agricultural change and development
policies in Latin America
– Agribusiness
– Food regimes and fast food
• The Environment and Agricultural
Industrialization (p. 327)
– Impact of the environment on
agriculture
– Impact of agriculture on the
environment
• Problems and Prospects in the
Global Food System (p. 330)
– Famine and undernutrition
– Genetically modified organisms
– Urban agriculture
• Conclusion (p. 335)
Geography Matters
• 8.1 Geography Matters—The Blue
Revolution and Global Shrimp (p. 310)
– The growth of the global shrimp trade and its impacts
• 8.2 Geography Matters—A Look at the Green
Revolution (p. 318)
– Feeding the world’s growing population
• 8.3 Window on the World—The New
Geography of Food and Agriculture in New
Zealand (p. 328)
– Changes in New Zealand’s agriculture
Agriculture and Food
Production
Agriculture has been transformed
into a globally integrated system.
Agriculture has progressed through
three revolutionary phases,
domestication through
biotechnology.
The introduction of new
technologies has dramatically
changed the process of agriculture.
Shifting cultivation, subsistence
agriculture and pastoralism has
been largely replaced by industrial
agriculture.
The contemporary agro-commodity
system is organized around a chain
of agribusiness components.
Transformations in agriculture have
had dramatic impacts on the
environment.
Traditional Agricultural Geography
• Agriculture is a science, an
art, and a business directed
at the cultivation of crops
and the raising of livestock
for sustenance and profit.
– Agrarian
– Hunting and gathering
– Subsistence agriculture
– Commercial agriculture
Pesticide Spraying: Nicaragua
The use of chemical, mechanical, and biotechnological innovations and
applications has significantly intensified farming practices. The decline
in the number of people employed in farming in both the core and
periphery is perhaps the biggest change in agriculture.
Global Distribution of Agriculture
Dramatic differences between core and periphery exists in regards to
commercial versus subsistence crops. The core is dominated by
commercial endeavors, a definite economic advantage.
Areas of Plant and Animal
Domestication
Subsistence agriculture replaced hunting and gathering activities in many
parts of the globe when people understood the advantages of a secure food
source. Human civilization, writing, economics, and government developed.
Shifting Cultivation
China: slash-and-burn
South America: processed
field
A form of agriculture usually found in tropical forests where farmers
aim to maintain soil fertility by rotating fields. Shifting cultivation is
different from crop rotation, whereby fields are continually used but
with complimentary crops that balance nutrient usage of the soil.
Farming Techniques
Intertillage Intensive subsistence
In the tropics, tubers predominate, while grains like rice are planted in flooded fields
of subtropical climes. Carbohydrate crops form the backbone of modern cultivation.
Pastoralism: Mongolia
Pastorialism involves the breeding and herding of animals to satisfy the
human needs for food, shelter, and clothing. Most pastoralists practice
transhumance, the movement of herds according to seasonal rhythms:
warmer, lowland areas in the winter, and cooler, highland areas in
summer.
Agricultural Revolution and
Industrialization
• The First Agricultural Revolution
– Founded on the development of seed agriculture and
the use of the plow and draft animals
– Domestication of plants and animals allowed for the
rise of settled ways of life
• The Second Agricultural Revolution
– Important elements include:
• Dramatic improvements in outputs, such as crop and livestock
yields
• Such innovations as the improved yoke for oxen and the
replacement of the ox with the horse
• New inputs to agricultural production, such as the application
of fertilizers and field drainage systems
The First Agricultural Revolution: Punjab, India
In many parts of the world, agriculturalists rely on draft animals to
prepare land for cultivation. By expanding the amount of energy applied
to production, draft animals enabled humans to increase food supplies.
Agricultural Revolutions and
Industrialization
• The Third Agricultural Revolution
– Three important phases originated in North
America:
• Mechanization: replaced human farm labor with
machines
• Chemical farming with synthetic fertilizers: application
of herbicides, fungicides, and pesticides to crops to
enhance yields
• Globally widespread food manufacturing: adding
economic value to agricultural products (i.e., processing
food between farms and markets)
– The first two phases involve inputs, while the third
involves a complication of farms to firms in the
manufacturing sector.
Old and New Farm Machines
Vasser student-farmer: 1917
Modern harvesting
equipment
Contract farming: contemporary agro-food
systems, whereby farmers and
processing/marketing firms have a binding
agreement on production, supply and
purchase of agricultural products
Worldwide Growth in Fertilizer Use
One of the biggest ongoing problems with increased fertilizer
usage is the increased runoff and resultant dead zones along ocean
shores.
The Industrialization of Agriculture
• Advances in science and
technology—including
mechanical as well as chemical
and biological innovations—
have determined the
industrialization of agriculture
over time.
• Three important developments:
– Changes in rural labor
activities as machines replace
and/or enhance human labor
– The introduction of innovative
inputs to supplement, alter, or
replace biological outputs
– The development of industrial
substitutes for agricultural
products (like Nutrasweet)
The Blue Revolution and Global Shrimp
Louisiana shrimpers Thai shrimp farm
Aquaculture claimed to be an answer to feeding the periphery a cheap
form of protein. The growth of the shrimp trade and aquaculture were
rapid, but the so-called “Pink Gold Rush” of shrimp exports has come
with a high social and ecological cost.
Knox/Marston: Places and Regions in Global Context, Fifth Edition Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.
Tractors Per 1,000 Hectares
Mechanized farming is an expensive undertaking requiring not
only machines but the ability to afford fuels and repairs, thus
concentration of tractors is highest in core countries.
Knox/Marston: Places and Regions in Global Context, Fifth Edition Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.
Environmental Impacts: Budapest, Hungary
In addition to causing soil degradation and denudation problems,
agriculture affects water quality and quantity through the overwithdrawal
of groundwater and the pollution of the same water through agricultural
runoff contaminated with chemicals.
Knox/Marston: Places and Regions in Global Context, Fifth Edition Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.
Governments, financial
services, and environmental
mediating forces influence
the food supply chain.
Knox/Marston: Places and Regions in Global Context, Fifth Edition Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.
Cattle Feedlot: Greely, Colorado, United States
The food chain concept illustrates the complex connections among
producers and consumers, and regions and places. It is now common to
find that traditional agricultural practices in peripheral regions have been
displaced by expensive, capital-intensive practices.
Knox/Marston: Places and Regions in Global Context, Fifth Edition Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.
U.S. Obesity Epidemic
What made the fast food fast was the adoption of industrial organizational
principles applied to food preparation in the form of the Speedee Service
System, created by the McDonald Brothers. However, health quality
suffered.
The New Geography of Food
and Agriculture in New Zealand
Global Distribution of Maize
Effects of the Green Revolution
This map illustrates the increased yields of protein crops, root crops, other cereals,
maize, rice, and wheat brought about by the Green Revolution in selected countries
in Latin America, Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, and the Middle East and North Africa.
Biorevolution and Ethics
• The Biorevolution is the
genetic engineering of
plants and animals with
the potential to greatly
exceed the productivity
improvements of the
Green Revolution.
– Biotechnology
– Biopharming
– (Norman) Borlaug
hypothesis
Ostrich-rearing Project: Kenya
Masai men are involved in an international development project focused
on ostrich-rearing and ecosystem management.
Food and Health: Salinas, California
While consumers worried about salmonella-tainted spinach, farmers were
laying off workers and plowing under their crops as government
inspectors examined their fields. The economic loss was estimated to be
nearly $100 million.
GMOs and the Global Food System
A genetically modified organism, or GMO, is any organism that has had
its DNA modified in a laboratory rather than through cross-pollination or
other forms of evolution. Food activist and leader of the French
Confederation Paysanne, Jose Bove, leads a protest march in Paris.
End of Chapter 8
Discussion Topics and Lecture
Themes
• What are the differences between subsistence
and commercial agriculture? What regions of the
world tend to practice these two basic
agricultural modes, and why?
– Subsistence agriculture is farming for direct
consumption by the producers, whereas commercial
agriculture is farming primarily for sale. Though
subsistence agriculture is declining, it is still
widespread in the periphery. Commercial agriculture
is dominant in core areas. Subsistence agriculture is
declining because many farmers will modify their
practices as they convert to a cash economy.
• What is pastoralism? Where is this practice
predominant today? Why in these areas?
– Pastoralism is a subsistence activity that involves
the breeding and herding of animals. It is most
commonly practiced in the cold and dry climates of
deserts, savannas (grasslands), and steppes (lightly
wooded, grassy plains). These drier regions are
usually unsuitable for other forms of agriculture.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
Themes
• What were the three agricultural revolutions, and what was the impact of
each?
– The First Agricultural Revolution: beginning before 10,000 bc in Europe and
Southeast Asia and characterized by the development of seed agriculture and
the use of plow and draft animals, it allowed for the development of
settlements. Farming replaced hunting and gathering, and population
increased as the land can support more people.
– The Second Agricultural Revolution: beginning around 1650 ad in Western
Europe and North America, this revolution is characterized by the production
of an agricultural surplus and the development of commercial agriculture, in
which the surplus is sold for profit. The second agricultural revolution was
closely linked to the Industrial Revolution taking place at the same time and in
the same places.
– The Third Agricultural Revolution: beginning in 1928 and characterized by the
development of agriculture as an industry with industrial methods and policies
of production. The emphasis on profit replaces the emphasis on the agrarian
way of life, and farms become large commercial enterprises or
agribusinesses. This revolution is further characterized by mechanization, in
which machines replace human labor, by chemical farming, in which inorganic
fertilizers are applied to the soil to increase yields, and by food manufacturing,
in which agriculture is linked to the processing and refining of foods.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
Themes
• What is meant by the industrialization of agriculture? Why has agriculture
become increasingly industrialized? What impacts has this had on the
world as a whole?
– Agricultural industrialization is a process in which the role of the farm is moved
from being the centerpiece of agricultural production into being only one part
of a system of production, storage, processing, distribution, marketing, and
retailing of foods. With agricultural industrialization, the farm becomes only
one link in a large chain of food production. The process of agricultural
industrialization involves three elements:
– Changes in rural labor activities as machines replace and/or improve human
labor.
– The introduction of innovative inputs—fertilizers, hybrid seeds, agrochemicals,
and biotechnologies—to supplement, alter, or replace biological outputs.
– The development of industrial substitutes for agricultural products (Nutrasweet
instead of sugar, and thickeners instead of cornstarch or flour, for example).
– Agricultural industrialization has not occurred everywhere in the world
simultaneously. This process occurred much earlier in the core countries, and
was later diffused to the periphery in a process known as the green revolution,
in which technological innovations were exported to the periphery to increase
crop yields.
– The Geography Matters 8.1 boxed text also provides information on the global
shrimp industry.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
Themes
• What is the Green Revolution? What positive
and negative impacts did this process have?
What regions benefited most from the Green
Revolution?
– The Green Revolution refers to the invention and
diffusion of new machines and institutions, from the
core to the periphery, to increase global agricultural
productivity. See the Geography Matters 8.2 boxed
text for a discussion of the implications of the Green
Revolution.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
Themes
• What is biotechnology? What effects has biotechnology had on
agriculture? What are the costs and benefits of the application of
modern biotechnological processes such as food irradiation and
cloning?
– Biotechnology is a technique that uses living organisms (or parts of
organisms) to make or modify products, to improve plants and
animals, or to develop microorganisms for specific uses.
Recombinant DNA, tissue culture, cell fusion, enzyme and
fermentation technology, embryo transfer, and cloning are some
examples of the application of biotechnology. While biotechnology
may lead to many improvements in agricultural efficiency, it can also
have negative effects such as the reduced resistance of cloned plants
to diseases. Biotechnological developments can also exacerbate
core-periphery differences, for example, when plants are developed
that can be grown outside their native areas. Private companies
normally patent biotechnological innovations, which means that the
new technologies are not always widely available.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
Themes
• How does the local area fit into the food supply
system or food chain? Is it a producer,
distributor, or consumer of agricultural
products, or perhaps a combination of these
factors? How does this affect the local
economy?
– All places are consumers of agricultural products,
and many are distributors of them as well. Even
places that are generally urbanized may have some
agricultural production. Data on these activities can
often be obtained from local and state government
agencies.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
Themes
• Think of five sample food items commonly
consumed in the local area. Where are these
items produced? How are they transported to
the local area? Could they be grown locally?
Why or why not?
– Local retailers and wholesalers may be able to
provide information on the local food economy. Also
try the Internet for information on particular food
items and where they are produced.
Discussion Topics and Lecture
Themes

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Human geography8

  • 1. Human Geography: Places and Regions in Global Context, 5e Chapter 8: Agriculture and Food Production Paul L. Knox & Sallie A. Marston PowerPoint Author: Keith M. Bell
  • 2. Overview Today agriculture is a highly complex, globally integrated system. It was not always that way. Agriculture has gone through three revolutions, each transforming the practice in major ways. Agriculture of the present is highly industrialized through the use of mechanization, chemical fertilizers, and through links to other sectors of the economy such as food processing and transportation. This chapter explores different kinds of agriculture and the regions in which each is practiced. Students should be aware of how agricultural practices in, for example, the tropics and in temperate regions differ from each other. Modern agriculture is the major focus of this chapter, especially the process of industrialization. Students should be aware of these changes. Agriculture is now part of the world economic system, and hence its economic, social, and environmental impacts are also global in nature. This process is easy to illustrate by examining the sources of foods commonly consumed in the United States and the process by which they reach their final market.
  • 3. Chapter Objectives • The objectives of this chapter are to: – Understand traditional agricultural geography – Examine the agricultural revolution and its industrialization – Investigate the forces of agricultural globalization – Explore the social and technological change in global agricultural restructuring – Examine the relationship between the environment and agricultural industrialization
  • 4. Chapter Outline • Chapter Outline • Traditional Agricultural Geography (p. 298) – Types of agriculture – Shifting cultivation – Intensive subsistence agriculture – Pastoralism • Agricultural Revolution and Industrialization (p. 305) – First agricultural revolution – Second agricultural revolution – Third agricultural revolution – Industrialization of agriculture • Global Change in Food Production and Consumption (p. 315) – Forces of globalization – Agricultural change and development policies in Latin America – Agribusiness – Food regimes and fast food • The Environment and Agricultural Industrialization (p. 327) – Impact of the environment on agriculture – Impact of agriculture on the environment • Problems and Prospects in the Global Food System (p. 330) – Famine and undernutrition – Genetically modified organisms – Urban agriculture • Conclusion (p. 335)
  • 5. Geography Matters • 8.1 Geography Matters—The Blue Revolution and Global Shrimp (p. 310) – The growth of the global shrimp trade and its impacts • 8.2 Geography Matters—A Look at the Green Revolution (p. 318) – Feeding the world’s growing population • 8.3 Window on the World—The New Geography of Food and Agriculture in New Zealand (p. 328) – Changes in New Zealand’s agriculture
  • 6. Agriculture and Food Production Agriculture has been transformed into a globally integrated system. Agriculture has progressed through three revolutionary phases, domestication through biotechnology. The introduction of new technologies has dramatically changed the process of agriculture. Shifting cultivation, subsistence agriculture and pastoralism has been largely replaced by industrial agriculture. The contemporary agro-commodity system is organized around a chain of agribusiness components. Transformations in agriculture have had dramatic impacts on the environment.
  • 7. Traditional Agricultural Geography • Agriculture is a science, an art, and a business directed at the cultivation of crops and the raising of livestock for sustenance and profit. – Agrarian – Hunting and gathering – Subsistence agriculture – Commercial agriculture
  • 8. Pesticide Spraying: Nicaragua The use of chemical, mechanical, and biotechnological innovations and applications has significantly intensified farming practices. The decline in the number of people employed in farming in both the core and periphery is perhaps the biggest change in agriculture.
  • 9. Global Distribution of Agriculture Dramatic differences between core and periphery exists in regards to commercial versus subsistence crops. The core is dominated by commercial endeavors, a definite economic advantage.
  • 10. Areas of Plant and Animal Domestication Subsistence agriculture replaced hunting and gathering activities in many parts of the globe when people understood the advantages of a secure food source. Human civilization, writing, economics, and government developed.
  • 11. Shifting Cultivation China: slash-and-burn South America: processed field A form of agriculture usually found in tropical forests where farmers aim to maintain soil fertility by rotating fields. Shifting cultivation is different from crop rotation, whereby fields are continually used but with complimentary crops that balance nutrient usage of the soil.
  • 12. Farming Techniques Intertillage Intensive subsistence In the tropics, tubers predominate, while grains like rice are planted in flooded fields of subtropical climes. Carbohydrate crops form the backbone of modern cultivation.
  • 13. Pastoralism: Mongolia Pastorialism involves the breeding and herding of animals to satisfy the human needs for food, shelter, and clothing. Most pastoralists practice transhumance, the movement of herds according to seasonal rhythms: warmer, lowland areas in the winter, and cooler, highland areas in summer.
  • 14. Agricultural Revolution and Industrialization • The First Agricultural Revolution – Founded on the development of seed agriculture and the use of the plow and draft animals – Domestication of plants and animals allowed for the rise of settled ways of life • The Second Agricultural Revolution – Important elements include: • Dramatic improvements in outputs, such as crop and livestock yields • Such innovations as the improved yoke for oxen and the replacement of the ox with the horse • New inputs to agricultural production, such as the application of fertilizers and field drainage systems
  • 15. The First Agricultural Revolution: Punjab, India In many parts of the world, agriculturalists rely on draft animals to prepare land for cultivation. By expanding the amount of energy applied to production, draft animals enabled humans to increase food supplies.
  • 16. Agricultural Revolutions and Industrialization • The Third Agricultural Revolution – Three important phases originated in North America: • Mechanization: replaced human farm labor with machines • Chemical farming with synthetic fertilizers: application of herbicides, fungicides, and pesticides to crops to enhance yields • Globally widespread food manufacturing: adding economic value to agricultural products (i.e., processing food between farms and markets) – The first two phases involve inputs, while the third involves a complication of farms to firms in the manufacturing sector.
  • 17. Old and New Farm Machines Vasser student-farmer: 1917 Modern harvesting equipment Contract farming: contemporary agro-food systems, whereby farmers and processing/marketing firms have a binding agreement on production, supply and purchase of agricultural products
  • 18. Worldwide Growth in Fertilizer Use One of the biggest ongoing problems with increased fertilizer usage is the increased runoff and resultant dead zones along ocean shores.
  • 19. The Industrialization of Agriculture • Advances in science and technology—including mechanical as well as chemical and biological innovations— have determined the industrialization of agriculture over time. • Three important developments: – Changes in rural labor activities as machines replace and/or enhance human labor – The introduction of innovative inputs to supplement, alter, or replace biological outputs – The development of industrial substitutes for agricultural products (like Nutrasweet)
  • 20. The Blue Revolution and Global Shrimp Louisiana shrimpers Thai shrimp farm Aquaculture claimed to be an answer to feeding the periphery a cheap form of protein. The growth of the shrimp trade and aquaculture were rapid, but the so-called “Pink Gold Rush” of shrimp exports has come with a high social and ecological cost.
  • 21. Knox/Marston: Places and Regions in Global Context, Fifth Edition Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Tractors Per 1,000 Hectares Mechanized farming is an expensive undertaking requiring not only machines but the ability to afford fuels and repairs, thus concentration of tractors is highest in core countries.
  • 22. Knox/Marston: Places and Regions in Global Context, Fifth Edition Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Environmental Impacts: Budapest, Hungary In addition to causing soil degradation and denudation problems, agriculture affects water quality and quantity through the overwithdrawal of groundwater and the pollution of the same water through agricultural runoff contaminated with chemicals.
  • 23. Knox/Marston: Places and Regions in Global Context, Fifth Edition Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Governments, financial services, and environmental mediating forces influence the food supply chain.
  • 24. Knox/Marston: Places and Regions in Global Context, Fifth Edition Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Cattle Feedlot: Greely, Colorado, United States The food chain concept illustrates the complex connections among producers and consumers, and regions and places. It is now common to find that traditional agricultural practices in peripheral regions have been displaced by expensive, capital-intensive practices.
  • 25. Knox/Marston: Places and Regions in Global Context, Fifth Edition Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. U.S. Obesity Epidemic What made the fast food fast was the adoption of industrial organizational principles applied to food preparation in the form of the Speedee Service System, created by the McDonald Brothers. However, health quality suffered.
  • 26. The New Geography of Food and Agriculture in New Zealand
  • 28. Effects of the Green Revolution This map illustrates the increased yields of protein crops, root crops, other cereals, maize, rice, and wheat brought about by the Green Revolution in selected countries in Latin America, Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, and the Middle East and North Africa.
  • 29. Biorevolution and Ethics • The Biorevolution is the genetic engineering of plants and animals with the potential to greatly exceed the productivity improvements of the Green Revolution. – Biotechnology – Biopharming – (Norman) Borlaug hypothesis
  • 30. Ostrich-rearing Project: Kenya Masai men are involved in an international development project focused on ostrich-rearing and ecosystem management.
  • 31. Food and Health: Salinas, California While consumers worried about salmonella-tainted spinach, farmers were laying off workers and plowing under their crops as government inspectors examined their fields. The economic loss was estimated to be nearly $100 million.
  • 32. GMOs and the Global Food System A genetically modified organism, or GMO, is any organism that has had its DNA modified in a laboratory rather than through cross-pollination or other forms of evolution. Food activist and leader of the French Confederation Paysanne, Jose Bove, leads a protest march in Paris.
  • 34. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes • What are the differences between subsistence and commercial agriculture? What regions of the world tend to practice these two basic agricultural modes, and why? – Subsistence agriculture is farming for direct consumption by the producers, whereas commercial agriculture is farming primarily for sale. Though subsistence agriculture is declining, it is still widespread in the periphery. Commercial agriculture is dominant in core areas. Subsistence agriculture is declining because many farmers will modify their practices as they convert to a cash economy.
  • 35. • What is pastoralism? Where is this practice predominant today? Why in these areas? – Pastoralism is a subsistence activity that involves the breeding and herding of animals. It is most commonly practiced in the cold and dry climates of deserts, savannas (grasslands), and steppes (lightly wooded, grassy plains). These drier regions are usually unsuitable for other forms of agriculture. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes
  • 36. • What were the three agricultural revolutions, and what was the impact of each? – The First Agricultural Revolution: beginning before 10,000 bc in Europe and Southeast Asia and characterized by the development of seed agriculture and the use of plow and draft animals, it allowed for the development of settlements. Farming replaced hunting and gathering, and population increased as the land can support more people. – The Second Agricultural Revolution: beginning around 1650 ad in Western Europe and North America, this revolution is characterized by the production of an agricultural surplus and the development of commercial agriculture, in which the surplus is sold for profit. The second agricultural revolution was closely linked to the Industrial Revolution taking place at the same time and in the same places. – The Third Agricultural Revolution: beginning in 1928 and characterized by the development of agriculture as an industry with industrial methods and policies of production. The emphasis on profit replaces the emphasis on the agrarian way of life, and farms become large commercial enterprises or agribusinesses. This revolution is further characterized by mechanization, in which machines replace human labor, by chemical farming, in which inorganic fertilizers are applied to the soil to increase yields, and by food manufacturing, in which agriculture is linked to the processing and refining of foods. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes
  • 37. • What is meant by the industrialization of agriculture? Why has agriculture become increasingly industrialized? What impacts has this had on the world as a whole? – Agricultural industrialization is a process in which the role of the farm is moved from being the centerpiece of agricultural production into being only one part of a system of production, storage, processing, distribution, marketing, and retailing of foods. With agricultural industrialization, the farm becomes only one link in a large chain of food production. The process of agricultural industrialization involves three elements: – Changes in rural labor activities as machines replace and/or improve human labor. – The introduction of innovative inputs—fertilizers, hybrid seeds, agrochemicals, and biotechnologies—to supplement, alter, or replace biological outputs. – The development of industrial substitutes for agricultural products (Nutrasweet instead of sugar, and thickeners instead of cornstarch or flour, for example). – Agricultural industrialization has not occurred everywhere in the world simultaneously. This process occurred much earlier in the core countries, and was later diffused to the periphery in a process known as the green revolution, in which technological innovations were exported to the periphery to increase crop yields. – The Geography Matters 8.1 boxed text also provides information on the global shrimp industry. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes
  • 38. • What is the Green Revolution? What positive and negative impacts did this process have? What regions benefited most from the Green Revolution? – The Green Revolution refers to the invention and diffusion of new machines and institutions, from the core to the periphery, to increase global agricultural productivity. See the Geography Matters 8.2 boxed text for a discussion of the implications of the Green Revolution. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes
  • 39. • What is biotechnology? What effects has biotechnology had on agriculture? What are the costs and benefits of the application of modern biotechnological processes such as food irradiation and cloning? – Biotechnology is a technique that uses living organisms (or parts of organisms) to make or modify products, to improve plants and animals, or to develop microorganisms for specific uses. Recombinant DNA, tissue culture, cell fusion, enzyme and fermentation technology, embryo transfer, and cloning are some examples of the application of biotechnology. While biotechnology may lead to many improvements in agricultural efficiency, it can also have negative effects such as the reduced resistance of cloned plants to diseases. Biotechnological developments can also exacerbate core-periphery differences, for example, when plants are developed that can be grown outside their native areas. Private companies normally patent biotechnological innovations, which means that the new technologies are not always widely available. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes
  • 40. • How does the local area fit into the food supply system or food chain? Is it a producer, distributor, or consumer of agricultural products, or perhaps a combination of these factors? How does this affect the local economy? – All places are consumers of agricultural products, and many are distributors of them as well. Even places that are generally urbanized may have some agricultural production. Data on these activities can often be obtained from local and state government agencies. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes
  • 41. • Think of five sample food items commonly consumed in the local area. Where are these items produced? How are they transported to the local area? Could they be grown locally? Why or why not? – Local retailers and wholesalers may be able to provide information on the local food economy. Also try the Internet for information on particular food items and where they are produced. Discussion Topics and Lecture Themes

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/story/2008/07/31/ST2008073100349.html http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/07/080715114149.htm http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/05/0525_050525_deadzone.html
  2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O5pA32cD1DM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1N0lM2DP8o&feature=related