Historical changes in the process of agricultural development in Cuba

The objective of this review is to demonstrate the non-linear properties of the Cuban process of agricultural development by characterizing and analyzing recent historical changes in this process, using the theoretical and methodological approach of adaptive renovation cycles. These changes are summed up in four stages: i) The stage of growth, which followed the period of the latifundio (large extensions of land devoted to monoculture or livestock), involved a series of structural changes oriented toward diversifying production and guaranteeing food self-sufficiency; during this stage, the nation`s agricultural production was organized into State businesses, State farms, and small farmers' cooperatives. ii) During the stage of agricultural maturity, Cuba adopted the dominant global tendency of increasing productivity through mechanization, based on use of high levels of agrochemicals; this was accompanied by environmental costs, and depended on high priced exports of sugarcane, coffee, tobacco, and citrus, and low priced imports of processed foods to meet the population`s dietary needs, through a commercial agreement with the socialist nations of Eastern Europe. iii) The stage of collapse occurred due to the late 1990s economic crisis which resulted in loss of access to markets of machinery, fuels, and other inputs; ensuing problems included soil erosion, groundwater contamination, and deforestation. iv) During the renovation stage, agriculture was reoriented toward cleaner production based on agroecology, organic practices, innovation, and collective learning. At the national level, the Farmer to Farmer Agroecology Movement was developed on rural family farms. Furthermore, the "urban agriculture" movement sprung up on small urban and peri-urban plots. Currently, regardless of the type of land ownership, agriculture in Cuba is oriented toward agroecology and cleaner production.

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Main Authors: Ponce Palma, Isela Doctora autora 13029, Nahed Toral, José Doctor autor 6870, Parra Vázquez, Manuel Roberto Doctor autor 2008, Fonseca Fuentes, Norge autor/a, Guevara Hernández, Francisco Doctor autor 13354
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Desarrollo agrícola, Agroecología, Historia,
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652613008548
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:43971
record_format koha
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Desarrollo agrícola
Agroecología
Historia
Desarrollo agrícola
Agroecología
Historia
spellingShingle Desarrollo agrícola
Agroecología
Historia
Desarrollo agrícola
Agroecología
Historia
Ponce Palma, Isela Doctora autora 13029
Nahed Toral, José Doctor autor 6870
Parra Vázquez, Manuel Roberto Doctor autor 2008
Fonseca Fuentes, Norge autor/a
Guevara Hernández, Francisco Doctor autor 13354
Historical changes in the process of agricultural development in Cuba
description The objective of this review is to demonstrate the non-linear properties of the Cuban process of agricultural development by characterizing and analyzing recent historical changes in this process, using the theoretical and methodological approach of adaptive renovation cycles. These changes are summed up in four stages: i) The stage of growth, which followed the period of the latifundio (large extensions of land devoted to monoculture or livestock), involved a series of structural changes oriented toward diversifying production and guaranteeing food self-sufficiency; during this stage, the nation`s agricultural production was organized into State businesses, State farms, and small farmers' cooperatives. ii) During the stage of agricultural maturity, Cuba adopted the dominant global tendency of increasing productivity through mechanization, based on use of high levels of agrochemicals; this was accompanied by environmental costs, and depended on high priced exports of sugarcane, coffee, tobacco, and citrus, and low priced imports of processed foods to meet the population`s dietary needs, through a commercial agreement with the socialist nations of Eastern Europe. iii) The stage of collapse occurred due to the late 1990s economic crisis which resulted in loss of access to markets of machinery, fuels, and other inputs; ensuing problems included soil erosion, groundwater contamination, and deforestation. iv) During the renovation stage, agriculture was reoriented toward cleaner production based on agroecology, organic practices, innovation, and collective learning. At the national level, the Farmer to Farmer Agroecology Movement was developed on rural family farms. Furthermore, the "urban agriculture" movement sprung up on small urban and peri-urban plots. Currently, regardless of the type of land ownership, agriculture in Cuba is oriented toward agroecology and cleaner production.
format Texto
topic_facet Desarrollo agrícola
Agroecología
Historia
author Ponce Palma, Isela Doctora autora 13029
Nahed Toral, José Doctor autor 6870
Parra Vázquez, Manuel Roberto Doctor autor 2008
Fonseca Fuentes, Norge autor/a
Guevara Hernández, Francisco Doctor autor 13354
author_facet Ponce Palma, Isela Doctora autora 13029
Nahed Toral, José Doctor autor 6870
Parra Vázquez, Manuel Roberto Doctor autor 2008
Fonseca Fuentes, Norge autor/a
Guevara Hernández, Francisco Doctor autor 13354
author_sort Ponce Palma, Isela Doctora autora 13029
title Historical changes in the process of agricultural development in Cuba
title_short Historical changes in the process of agricultural development in Cuba
title_full Historical changes in the process of agricultural development in Cuba
title_fullStr Historical changes in the process of agricultural development in Cuba
title_full_unstemmed Historical changes in the process of agricultural development in Cuba
title_sort historical changes in the process of agricultural development in cuba
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652613008548
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:439712024-03-12T12:51:19ZHistorical changes in the process of agricultural development in Cuba Ponce Palma, Isela Doctora autora 13029 Nahed Toral, José Doctor autor 6870 Parra Vázquez, Manuel Roberto Doctor autor 2008 Fonseca Fuentes, Norge autor/a Guevara Hernández, Francisco Doctor autor 13354 textengThe objective of this review is to demonstrate the non-linear properties of the Cuban process of agricultural development by characterizing and analyzing recent historical changes in this process, using the theoretical and methodological approach of adaptive renovation cycles. These changes are summed up in four stages: i) The stage of growth, which followed the period of the latifundio (large extensions of land devoted to monoculture or livestock), involved a series of structural changes oriented toward diversifying production and guaranteeing food self-sufficiency; during this stage, the nation`s agricultural production was organized into State businesses, State farms, and small farmers' cooperatives. ii) During the stage of agricultural maturity, Cuba adopted the dominant global tendency of increasing productivity through mechanization, based on use of high levels of agrochemicals; this was accompanied by environmental costs, and depended on high priced exports of sugarcane, coffee, tobacco, and citrus, and low priced imports of processed foods to meet the population`s dietary needs, through a commercial agreement with the socialist nations of Eastern Europe. iii) The stage of collapse occurred due to the late 1990s economic crisis which resulted in loss of access to markets of machinery, fuels, and other inputs; ensuing problems included soil erosion, groundwater contamination, and deforestation. iv) During the renovation stage, agriculture was reoriented toward cleaner production based on agroecology, organic practices, innovation, and collective learning. At the national level, the Farmer to Farmer Agroecology Movement was developed on rural family farms. Furthermore, the "urban agriculture" movement sprung up on small urban and peri-urban plots. Currently, regardless of the type of land ownership, agriculture in Cuba is oriented toward agroecology and cleaner production.The objective of this review is to demonstrate the non-linear properties of the Cuban process of agricultural development by characterizing and analyzing recent historical changes in this process, using the theoretical and methodological approach of adaptive renovation cycles. These changes are summed up in four stages: i) The stage of growth, which followed the period of the latifundio (large extensions of land devoted to monoculture or livestock), involved a series of structural changes oriented toward diversifying production and guaranteeing food self-sufficiency; during this stage, the nation`s agricultural production was organized into State businesses, State farms, and small farmers' cooperatives. ii) During the stage of agricultural maturity, Cuba adopted the dominant global tendency of increasing productivity through mechanization, based on use of high levels of agrochemicals; this was accompanied by environmental costs, and depended on high priced exports of sugarcane, coffee, tobacco, and citrus, and low priced imports of processed foods to meet the population`s dietary needs, through a commercial agreement with the socialist nations of Eastern Europe. iii) The stage of collapse occurred due to the late 1990s economic crisis which resulted in loss of access to markets of machinery, fuels, and other inputs; ensuing problems included soil erosion, groundwater contamination, and deforestation. iv) During the renovation stage, agriculture was reoriented toward cleaner production based on agroecology, organic practices, innovation, and collective learning. At the national level, the Farmer to Farmer Agroecology Movement was developed on rural family farms. Furthermore, the "urban agriculture" movement sprung up on small urban and peri-urban plots. Currently, regardless of the type of land ownership, agriculture in Cuba is oriented toward agroecology and cleaner production.Adobe Acrobat profesional 6.0 o superiorDesarrollo agrícolaAgroecologíaHistoriaDisponible en líneaJournal of Cleaner Productionhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652613008548Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso