RE-ENTERING AFRICAN-AMERICAN FARMERS: RECENT TRENDS AND A POLICY RATIONALE
Spencer D. WOOD; Jess GILBERT
ltc-uw@facstaff.wisc.edu
Working paper, no. 12. North America series
March 1998, 24 pages; Adobe Acrobat pdf 410K bytes
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ABSTRACT: Today, there are only about 15,000 black farmers in the United
States. Declining by 98 percent since 1920, black farmers have suffered losses
attributable to public policy, economic pressures, and racial oppression. All of these
factors must be addressed if African-American farmers are to survive. In this paper, we
use Census of Agriculture data and a follow-on survey in one Mississippi Delta county to
review the current situation of black farmers. We introduce the concept of
"re-entering farmers" to suggest that a significant number of black farmers, who
are not defined as "farmers" by the Census, still own land and want to farm
again. The first section of the paper provides a brief overview of the historical and
current trends of black farmers in the United States. The second section discusses Delta
County, drawing upon our survey and the Census of Agriculture. The third section discusses
the implications of civil rights violations by the former Farmers Home Administration of
the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Finally, we conclude with a policy recommendation to
slow the drastic decline of African-American farmers.
Keywords: Afro-American farmers--Mississippi; Land use, Rural--Mississippi;
Afro-American farmers--Civil rights--United States; Afro-American farmers--Government
policy--United States; Agriculture and state--United States; Farms, Size of--Southern
States; Discrimination in financial services--United States; Agrarian structure--United
States--Southern States

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