ABSTRACT

In the years before the Second World War agriculture in most European states was carried out on peasant or small family farms using technologies that relied mainly on organic inputs and local knowledge and skills, supplying products into a market that was partly local or national, partly international. The war applied a profound shock to this system. In some countries farms became battlefields, causing the extensive destruction of buildings, crops and livestock. In others, farmers had to respond to calls from the state for increased production to cope with the effects of wartime disruption of international trade. By the end of the war food was rationed when it was obtainable at all. Only fifteen years later the erstwhile enemies were planning ways of bringing about a single agricultural market across much of continental western Europe, as farmers mechanised, motorized, shed labour, invested capital, and adopted new technologies to increase output. This volume brings together scholars working on this period of dramatic technical, commercial and political change in agriculture, from the end of the Second World War to the emergence of the Common Agricultural Policy in the early 1960s. Their work is structured around four themes: the changes in the international political order within which agriculture operated; the emergence of a range of different market regulation schemes that preceded the CAP; changes in technology and the extent to which they were promoted by state policy; and the impact of these political and technical changes on rural societies in western Europe.

chapter 1|20 pages

European agriculture, 1945–1960

An introduction

part II|58 pages

Market regulation and the motives behind it

chapter 6|18 pages

British agriculture in transition

Food shortages to food surpluses, 1947–1957

chapter 7|18 pages

From food surplus to even more food surplus

Agrarian politics and prices in Denmark, 1945–1962

part III|63 pages

Technical change

chapter 8|20 pages

Mechanisation and motorisation

Natural resources, knowledge, politics and technology in 19th- and 20th-century agriculture

chapter 10|21 pages

Tractorisation

France, 1946–1955

part IV|57 pages

Rural society and structural policy

chapter 11|20 pages

Structural policy and the State

Changing agricultural society in Belgium and the Netherlands, 1945–1960

chapter 12|17 pages

From food scarcity to overproduction

Saving the German peasant during the miracle years

part |10 pages

Conclusion