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  1. The state, hog hotels, and the "right to farm": A curious relationship. [REVIEW]Laura B. DeLind - 1995 - Agriculture and Human Values 12 (3):34-44.
    A grassroots protest against a large-scale confinement swine facility in Jackson Country, Michigan resulted in an out-of-court settlement that redressed the concerns of local residents. At the same time, the protest was instrumental in modifying state-level legislation to secure greater legal protection for intensive animal agriculture. The paper traces this ironic turn of events. Original efforts to regulate industrial agriculture were publicly reinterpreted by agribusiness as an assault on the "right to farm" of all farmers, regardless of scale and organizational (...)
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  • Celebrating hunger in Michigan: A critique of an emergency food program and an alternative for the future. [REVIEW]Laura B. DeLind - 1994 - Agriculture and Human Values 11 (4):58-68.
    Michigan Harvest Gathering is a popular and nationally acclaimed antihunger campaign. It represents a state-sponsored partnership among public, private, and nonprofit institutions “to improve conditions for Michigan's citizens in need". This paper reviews the program, and in the process, critically examines its underlying assumptions about the nature of hunger and helping, about those who are hungry, and about the relationship of agriculture to the remediation of hunger throughout the state. It argues that, in keeping with Michigan's corporatist orientation, the program (...)
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