منبر معارف الزراعة الأُسرية

Subsistence Farming in Bulgaria: Between Tradition and Market Requirements

Subsistence agriculture is a phenomenon that is presently encountered not only in developing countries, but also in the Central and Eastern European transition countries (CEECs). The various land reforms implemented in Eastern Europe have led to differences in the land tenure and farming systems and have influenced the access to land and capital and farms' productive efficiency. The Bulgarian land reform of 1991 changed the economic behaviour of the rural population. It created new visions, a new environment and possibilities for the development of rural households, and took them to a decision-making crossroads: to continue working in agriculture or to leave it; to enter the agricultural sector or to stay out of it; to change or leave unaltered their economic, social and environmental preferences. As a consequence of all these decisions, an imbalance in the agricultural sector emerged.

Title of publication: Subsistence Agriculture in Central and Eastern Europe: How to Break the Vicious Circle?
المجلد: 22
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ISSN: 1436-221X
نطاق الصفحات: 133-146
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المؤلف: DIANA KOPEVA, NIVELIN NOEV
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المنظمة: Institute of Agricultural Development in Central and Eastern Europe
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السنة: 2003
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البلد/البلدان: Bulgaria
التغطية الجغرافية: أوروبا وآسيا الوسطى, الاتحاد الأوروبى
النوع: مقال صحفي
النص الكامل متاح على: http://www.iamo.de/fileadmin/documents/sr_vol22.pdf
لغة المحتوى: English
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