Document Type
Report
Journal/Book Title
PATS Staff Paper No. 2
Publication Date
1998
First Page
1
Last Page
25
Abstract
One of the most dramatic trends in American farm-structural change over the past several decades has been the industrialization of livestock production. Many now expect that dairying in the United States will be the next major livestock sector to succumb to the industrialization trend. This paper utilizes a multidimensional definition of industrialization to critically examine evidence for and against the dairy industrialization hypothesis. The authors find that while there is a persistent trend toward larger units of production, and a geographical shift towards states with more industriallike farm operations, the penetration of industrial relations of production has occurred more slowly and incompletely than many have assumed. The paper concludes by noting how unique characteristics of the dairy sector help explain the uneven character of the industrialization process in the United States.
Recommended Citation
Jackson-Smith, D. B. and F. H. Buttel. 1998. Explaining the Uneven Penetration of Industrialization in the U.S. Dairy Sector. PATS Staff Paper No. 2. Madison: Program on Agricultural Technology Studies, University of Wisconsin, June. http://www.pats.wisc.edu/pubs/60