The Takeover
Chicken Farming and the Roots of American Agribusiness
Title Details
Pages: 124
Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in
Formats
Paperback
Pub Date: 04/15/2017
ISBN: 9-780-8203-4971-8
List Price: $25.95
Hardcover
Pub Date: 04/15/2017
ISBN: 9-780-8203-3578-0
List Price: $62.95
Web PDF
Pub Date: 04/15/2017
ISBN: 9-780-8203-4945-9
List Price: $25.95
Related Subjects
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Agriculture & Food
NATURE / Environmental Conservation & Protection
Other Links of Interest
• Learn more about the Georgia poultry industry at the New Georgia Encyclopedia
The Takeover
Chicken Farming and the Roots of American Agribusiness
Tracing the revolutionary shift from small- to industrial-scale poultry farming in the South
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Economists have described the upcountry Georgia poultry industry as the quintessential agribusiness. Following a trajectory from Reconstruction through the Great Depression to the present day, Monica R. Gisolfi shows how the poultry farming model of semivertical integration perfected a number of practices that had first underpinned the cotton-growing crop-lien system, ultimately transforming the poultry industry in ways that drove tens of thousands of farmers off the land and rendered those who remained dependent on large agribusiness firms.
Gisolfi argues that the inequalities inherent in the structure of modern poultry farming have led to steep human and environmental costs. Agribusiness firms—many of them descended from the cotton-era South’s furnishing merchants—brought farmers into a system of feed-conversion contracts that placed all production decisions in the hands of the poultry corporations but at least half of the capital risks on the farmers. Along the way, the federal government aided and abetted—sometimes unwittingly—the consolidation of power by poultry firms through direct and indirect subsidies and favorable policies. Drawing on USDA files, oral history, congressional records, and poultry publications, Gisolfi puts a local face on one of the twentieth century’s silent agribusiness revolutions.
—Melissa Walker, author of Southern Farmers and Their Stories: Memory and Meaning in Oral History
—Sarah T. Phillips, author of This Land, This Nation: Conservation, Rural America, and the New Deal
—Appalachian Mountain Books
Winner
Award for Excellence in Research, Georgia Historical Records Advisory Council