I disagree with the premise of this article
by
blueberry sushi
11/03/2009, 12:38 PM #
Large farms are probably beneficial for the labor conditions that exist today, because the labor conditions that exist today were designed to benefit large farms.
Rural places were very different, say, at the beginning of the 20th century, when the agrarian ideal was still possible or at least the touchstone of our relationship with agriculture and rural places. It sounds like Manuel is a migrant laborer, and for migrant laborers, who do not live in the communities where the farm is located, and who do not (obviously) own their own land, it may be the best situation to be in a highly organized, bureaucratic work environment where government oversight can better ensure fair work conditions. But the idealized agrarian work environment was about people who lived in the communities where the farms were located (and this is something that many people are trying to get back to), who were neighbors helping neighbors, or just the poor, landless helping the richer, landed.
One of the problems with the agricultural ownership patterns of today that makes agrarianism practically impossible is that rural communities have changed fundamentally, from providing food for local or regional tables to providing food for a global marketplace. This necessitates large farms in order to be able to compete, and since large farms, by definition, mean fewer landowners, we have fewer people who are invested in the rural landscape and fewer people who are actually tied to rural places by "productivist" (agricultural) means. So rural people are, by and large, not working in the fields. Who works in the fields? The people we can pay the least, who we are not obligated to: migrant laborers.There is a rift, between all people and the land, and between people and people.
I am not trying to diminish the importance of migrant labor, either for our own food economy or for the places that benefit from money sent home. But I think that saying "big is better" is a teleological argument. It is because it happened that way - the final purpose is explained by the events that led to it. Well, duh. There are alternatives, and these alternatives include forging new relationships between people and the land. Relationships that are built on more than labor conditions, but (just possibly) actual mutual obligation, to neighbors, to land, and even to consumers.
BTW - I have worked in agriculture, and almost entirely with Mexican migrant crews, in a cherry orchard that exported cherries all over the place, even Japan. So it was a globalized, if small, operation. I really don't want this to seem anti-migrant labor. But I think that migrant labor is a product of the agricultural structure, and I do think that it can have negative consequences for the home country, and for the families that are separated.