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dc.contributor.authorUNGER, Corinna R.
dc.date.accessioned2016-01-28T15:03:05Z
dc.date.available2016-01-28T15:03:05Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.identifier.citationGeschichte und Gesellschaft, 2015, Vol. 41, No. 4, pp. 552-579en
dc.identifier.issn0340-613X
dc.identifier.issn2196-9000
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/38747
dc.description.abstractThis article analyzes the role awarded to agriculture and the rural sector in international development thinking over the course of the twentieth century, focusing especially on the modernization approaches promoted by development agents to reform agricultural practices and rural life according to the problems they believed they had identified. The majority of the countries that came to be understood through the prism of development were predominantly rural, agricultural, or both. The article thus argues that it is vital that we better understand the ways in which development experts and policymakers conceptualized rural life and agricultural production with an eye to identifying both similarities and differences across temporal and spatial distances.en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.relation.ispartofGeschichte und Gesellschaften
dc.titleAgrarwissenschaftliche Expertise und ländliche Modernisierungsstrategien in der internationalen Entwicklungspolitik, 1920er bis 1980er Jahreen
dc.typeArticleen
dc.identifier.volume41en
dc.identifier.startpage552en
dc.identifier.endpage579en
dc.identifier.issue4en


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