Why Farmers and Environmentalists Need Each Other - FIC

We’ve detected that you are using an outdated browser.

Please use a new browser like Chrome, Firefox, Safari or Microsoft Edge to improve your experience.

We’ve detected that you are using an outdated browser.

Publications

Why Farmers and Environmentalists Need Each Other

Rural America is struggling. Family agriculture is gradually fading, and prime farmland is often converted into environmentally harmful applications. But food cultivation has ecological consequences, too. Farms consume eighty percent of the nation’s water. Although they often prevent sprawling development, improve water quality, or provide wildlife habitat, they also pollute rivers, drain wetlands, or emit destructive greenhouse gasses. The loss of farms and damage to ecosystems are connected, and a major cause is the political deadlock between farmers and environmental activists.

Topics include incentives, regulations, government spending, environmental markets, growth management, climate change, public lands grazing, and the Federal Farm Bill. The book identifies characteristics of successful community programs to suggest a model for a prosperous, healthy future.

Author
Don Stuart
Publisher
Pullman, WA: Washington State University Press
Page Numbers
288
Publication Date
August 01, 2014
Publication Type
Books
State
National
Keywords
Conservation Policies and Programs, Conservation Tax Incentives, Farm Bill, Federal Farmland Protection Policies & Programs, Smart Growth / Growth Management

Visit American Farmland Trust

Get engaged and receive the information you need right in your inbox.