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Journal Article
Agricultural History (2007) 81 (4): 471–492.
Published: 01 October 2007
...Jason Morgan Ward Abstract During World War II, the POW labor program provided cotton planters in the lower Mississippi Valley with a temporary yet timely solution to an increasingly mobile local labor supply. While war prisoners worked in a variety of crops and non-agricultural industries, one...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2021) 95 (4): 633–658.
Published: 01 October 2021
... (POWs) as a part of this program.2 Migrants and detainees shared agricultural spaces with war prisoners, although different laws governed their freedom and security. Japanese Americans could not return home to the West Coast, POWs could not refuse work, and all three groups cultivated food for someone...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2011) 85 (1): 72–101.
Published: 01 January 2011
... to Conrad Taeuber, May 12, 1942, quoted in Pete Daniel , “Going among Strangers: Southern Reactions to World War II,” Journal of American History 77 ( Dec. 1990 ): 889 ; Jason Morgan Ward , “‘Nazis Hoe Cotton’: Planters, POWs, and the Future of Farm Labor in the Deep South...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2000) 74 (3): 708–709.
Published: 01 July 2000
..., whilst Victorian culture contained a pow? erful dynamic towards the "improvement" of nature, it also included often strategically placed elements which, for a wide variety of reasons, resisted this instrumental approach. One of the most important of these elements was the estate system. Both...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2016) 90 (4): 555–556.
Published: 01 October 2016
... for living space would involve the death of millions of Soviet PoWs deemed racially inferior. recent studies, including gerhard s, emphasize that nazi food policy intentionally brought hunger to half of all Soviet civilians, with urban inhabitants suffering most. There is less consensus about how nazi food...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2016) 90 (4): 554–555.
Published: 01 October 2016
... and north and central russia and exploiting ukraine and the Caucasus. Scholars have long agreed that the Third reich assumed its conquest for living space would involve the death of millions of Soviet PoWs deemed racially inferior. recent studies, including gerhard s, emphasize that nazi food policy...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2007) 81 (4): 551–555.
Published: 01 October 2007
.... Edwards Award JASON MORGAN WARD is the 2006 winner of the Everett E. Ed wards award for the best article submitted toAgricultural History by a graduate student. At present, he is a doctoral candidate in history at Yale UniversityH. is article is entitledNazis Hoe Cotton': Planters, POWs, and the Future...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2016) 90 (3): 311–337.
Published: 01 July 2016
... ), 94 , 97 , 105 , 107 , 253 , 279 , 280 , 298 ; Cavender , Folk Medicine in Southern Appalachia ( Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press , 2003 ), 45 , 95 , 97 . 9. John George Hoffman , “A Good Remedy for the Bots in Horses,” Pow-Wows, or Long Lost Friend...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2006) 80 (1): 101–104.
Published: 01 January 2006
... book, but one carefully constructed to show why a way of life ceased to be. It was a pow- erful, thought-provoking history of a people and a policy. The history of performance art absorbed much of Neth's creative inter? ests during the last decade. Her scholarly interest was first piqued with re...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2022) 96 (1-2): 164–186.
Published: 01 May 2022
... Lillquist, “Farming the Desert” ; and Chiang, Nature behind Barbed Wire . Examples of the many studies of bracero and prisoner of war (POW) farm labor include Cohen, Braceros ; Mize, Invisible Workers ; Coronado Gamboa and Leonard, Mexican Labor and World War II ; Heisler, “‘Other Braceros...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2000) 74 (2): 569–584.
Published: 01 April 2000
... property values, direct results of swine industry odor. Neighbors argue their communities are virtually pow- erless against the political clout of the hog industry, and they are largely cor- rect. Documented cases of questionable land use leading to environmental hazards cover the South. Economic class...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2000) 74 (1): 19–38.
Published: 01 January 2000
... "watchers." Another time, black Republicans used Myers's store as the meeting place for what Democratic papers called a "grand political pow-wow." In addition to such demonstrations in support of deadfall merchants, black farmers prevailed upon Republican politicians to oppose any "deadfall bills...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2007) 81 (3): 358–380.
Published: 01 July 2007
.... As early as 1913 demotic had become the language of the first four classes of the primary schooling system, and in 1917 it was reintroducedas part of theeducational reformsinstitutedby the Venizelos governmenDt.uring thisperiod themembersof themost pow erful demoticist lobby-Ekpedeftikos Omilos (EO...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2019) 93 (1): 139–172.
Published: 01 January 2019
... in France in 1940 and spent the next five years in a POW camp. From there he helped organize the resistance. After the war, he returned to the Polish army for a few years before moving to the United States. By 1966, he was a professor of economics at University of California-Santa Barbara.22 The careers...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2021) 95 (1): 132–171.
Published: 01 January 2021
... to the deputy secretary and other department principals on refugee and migration concerns, as well as on POW/MIA issues.14 Carter would later select Mississippi civil rights activist and deputy director of the Carter-Mondale campaign Patricia Patt Murphy Derian to serve as coordinator for human rights...