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Success factors for farming collectives [PDF]

open access: possible, 2010
In order to analyse the current state of farming collectives (FCs) in Switzerland we examined the influence of agro-economic and psychological factors on their success. The latter category was split up into interpersonal, economic and overall success and built up on the basis of a number of indicators.
Iris Pulfer, Markus Lips
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Collective Farming

Madras Agricultural Journal, 1942
In the village of Peddaradugur in the Gooty Taluk (Anantapur District) there is an interesting system of collective farming, ideal in its organization and efficient in management. There are 36 acres of wetland irrigated by a spring channel, composed of 44 shares, each share being a unit of one head of working animal (Tel. Pothu bagamu).
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DC Collection for Wind Farms

2008 IEEE Energy 2030 Conference, 2008
In the US, much of the wind resource is located a significant distance from population centers. Existing AC grids, if available, are weak and incapable of carrying large amounts of wind power. Use of proven HVDC technology using voltage source converters (VSC) to perform the long haul for wind energy offers significant advantages at the system level ...
Anish Prasai, Deepak Divan
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Success factors for farming collectives

2008
As the most intensive form of partnership in agriculture, farming collectives (FCs) place high demands on their participants. Based on a census of Swiss farming collectives, three success indicators are formed. The first and second describe interpersonal and economic success respectively, whilst the third encompasses overall success.
Pulfer, Iris   +3 more
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Family Farms, Cooperatives and Collectives

1992
What is more natural than to expect modem agriculture to be organized in large-scale food factories? Such expectations notwithstanding, a large part of agricultural production - though not all of it - is still done on family farms. Evidently, economies of scale in production, to the extent that they exist, are outweighed by countervailing forces.
Kislev, Yoav, Kislev, Yoav
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Breaking up the collective farms

Economics of Transition, 2004
AbstractThe de‐collectivization of Vietnamese agriculture was a crucial step in the country's transition to a market economy. The assignment of land‐use rights had to be decentralized and local cadres ostensibly had the power to capture this process. We assess the realized land allocation against explicit counter‐factuals.
Martin Ravallion, Dominique Van De Walle
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Indivisible Funds of the Collective Farms, Cooperation Among Collective Farms in Matters of Production

Problems in Economics, 1959
Much attention is given to problems of further development of agricultural production in the theses of Comrade N. S. Khrushchev's report at the 21st Congress of the CPSU. They pose problems of exceptional importance having to do with the improvement of socialist relationships of production and determination of the direction in which the cooperative ...
P. Golubkov, V. Ovchinnikova
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