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Farming
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Farming sits at the intersection of history, economics, environmental science, and culture, making it a subject that appears across a wide range of academic disciplines and course levels. Business courses examine it through the lens of production, marketing, and supply chains, while history courses treat agriculture as a foundation of civilizational development. The recurring themes of land, soil, water, and food production give the topic both practical urgency and rich scholarly depth. Works like Valerie J. Matsumoto's Farming the Home Place bring cultural and community dimensions to the subject, while questions about organic versus conventional farming connect it to ongoing debates about environmental health and consumer choice.

Student papers on this topic take a notably wide range of approaches. Historical analyses trace the evolution of agriculture from practices in the Middle Ages through regional developments, such as the transformation of farming in New Jersey over several decades. Other papers focus on specific resources like groundwater in Kansas, raising environmental and policy concerns around soil and water sustainability. Marketing-oriented essays examine how agricultural products reach consumers, including strategies for introducing food products to international markets. Ethnographic and profile-based approaches appear as well, with writers documenting the experiences of local farmers and producers or examining farming communities like the Enga people.

A strong essay on farming benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that commits to one dimension — historical, economic, environmental, or cultural — rather than trying to cover all of them at once. Evidence drawn from regional case studies, specific agricultural practices, or documented policy outcomes tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating farming as a purely technical subject and neglecting the social, economic, or environmental forces that shape how land is used and by whom.

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Paper Undergraduate
U.S. Labor Movement and Grapes
Like Woody Guthrie's Dust Bowl Ballads, Steinbeck's the Grapes of Wrath (1939) depicts a certain moment in American farm labor. While Guthrie sang of not being defeated and of tough times and desperate outlaws,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Labor and the growth of the northern American colonies
The growth of colonies in the North America started in the sixteenth century. All attempts of king Jacob II to organize trade companies (such as Moscow or West Indian) in the North America failed and the development of…
Paper Undergraduate
NCTM's agenda for action and standards
Over time, new generations of students come equipped with unique and different background knowledge. In the 1980s, NCTM, or the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, launched a new Agenda for Action.
Paper Undergraduate
Nigerian local content law and capacity building in oil and gas
A rather simple definition of the term local content is; "…the use of local skills and materials in constructing and/or maintaining an asset or service" (Local Content) This includes aspect such as employment and skills…
Paper Undergraduate
Civil War How the Civil
How the Civil War Shaped the Nation's View
Paper Undergraduate
How Did English Settlement Affect the Land of North America?
¶ … British agricultural revolution and English settlement patterns in their colonies in New England. It is the authors contention that the world view of the English influenced their agricultural practices and the way…
Paper Undergraduate
Big business and labor in the late 19th century
In the wake of Reconstruction, all of America began to rapidly industrialize. It was no longer divided between an agrarian South and an industrial North -- now all of America was undergoing rapid economic change.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Urban encroachment on agriculture in Northern California
In the past few years, the continued loss of rich agricultural lands in Northern California to urban encroachment has emerged as an issue of significant concern to land use specialists, regional planners, government…
Paper Undergraduate
Worst Hard Times Those Who
Those who were not blow away by the Dust Bowl: The Worst Hard Times by Timothy Egan
Paper Undergraduate
Urban Sprawl Nature vs. Suburbia
Urban sprawl and its impact on the environment has become one of the hottest topics in the media. Urban sprawl eats up farmland and wildlife habitat. On one side are the homeowners, who claim that humans are more…