Category
page 1Agrarian politics
Food and Agriculture Organization
international organization with the objective of ending hunger

Luddite movement
thumb|The Leader of the Luddites, 1812. Hand-coloured etching
The Luddites were members of a 19th-century movement of English textile workers who opposed the use of certain types of automated machinery due to concerns relating to worker pay and output quality. They often destroyed the machines in organised raids. Members of the group referred to themselves as Luddites, self-described followers of "Ned Ludd", a legendary weaver whose name was used as a pseudonym in threatening letters to mill owners and government officials.
World Food Day
Annual Celebration in honor of founding of Food and Agriculture Organization of UN in 1945

Narodniks
The Narodniks were members of a movement of the Russian Empire intelligentsia in the 1860s and 1870s, some of whom became involved in revolutionary agitation against tsarism. Their ideology, known as Narodism, Narodnism, or '''''', was a form of agrarian socialism, though it is often misunderstood as populism.
agricultural policy
laws relating to domestic agriculture and imports of foreign agricultural products

Makhnovshchina
blood and soil
Nazi slogan
Via Campesina
organization
Stolypin reform
agrarian reform
neo-Luddism
Neo-Luddism or new Luddism is a philosophy opposing many forms of modern technology. The term Luddite is generally used as a pejorative applied to people showing technophobic leanings. The name is based on the historical legacy of the English Luddites, who were active between 1811 and 1817. While the original Luddites were mostly concerned with the economic implications of improving technology in regard to industrialization, neo-Luddites tend to have a broader and more holistic distrust of technological improvement.

Diggers
The Diggers were a group of religious and political dissidents in England, associated with a political ideology and programme resembling what would later be called agrarian socialism. Gerrard Winstanley and William Everard, amongst many others, were known as True Levellers in 1649, in reference to their split from the Levellers, and later became known as Diggers because of their attempts to farm on common land. Due to this and to their beliefs, the Diggers were driven from one county after another by the authorities.
High Fructose Corn Syrup
processed corn syrup
localism
range of political philosophies which prioritize the local management and sovereignty
collective farming
type of agricultural production in which multiple farmers run their holdings as a joint enterprise
International Food Policy Research Institute
Organization
2024 European farmers' protests
Demonstrations by European farmers against the requirements of the European Green Deal and importation of agricultural products from non-European Union member states
land grabbing
large-scale acquisition of farmland (over 1,000 ha) whether by purchase, leases or other means.
Brook Farm
intentional community

Krestintern
The Peasant International (), known most commonly by its Russian abbreviation Krestintern (Крестинтерн), was an international peasants' organization formed by the Communist International (Comintern) in October 1923. The organization attempted to achieve united front relations with radical peasant parties in Eastern Europe and Asia, without lasting success. After failing to make headway with important initiatives in Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, and China in the 1920s, the organization was placed on hiatus at the end of the decade. The so-called Red Peasant International was formally dissolved in 1939.
Artaman League
Agrarian predecessor to the Nazi Party

2020s French farmers' protests
2020s civil unrest in France
International Agrarian Bureau
organization
peasant movement
social movement of farm workers or small landholders
Agreement on Agriculture
international treaty of the World Trade Organization
Agrarian Justice
pamphlet by Thomas Paine
Khlopoman
thumb|250px|Painter and playwright Stanisław Wyspiański, self-portrait with peasant wife Teofilia Pytko, 1904
Chłopomania () or Khlopomanstvo ( ) are historical and literary terms inspired by the Young Poland modernist movement and the Ukrainian Hromady. The expressions refer to the intelligentsia's fascination with, and interest in, the peasantry in late-19th-century Galicia and right-bank Ukraine.
2023-2024 German farmers' protests
protest of German farmers since december 2023
Sămănătorul
Sămănătorul or Semănătorul (, Romanian for "The Sower") was a literary and political magazine published in Romania between 1901 and 1910. Founded by poets Alexandru Vlahuță and George Coșbuc, it is primarily remembered as a tribune for early 20th century traditionalism, neoromanticism and ethnic nationalism. The magazine's ideology, commonly known as Sămănătorism or Semănătorism, was articulated after 1905, when historian and literary theorist Nicolae Iorga became editor in chief. While its populism, critique of capitalism and emphasis on peasant society separated it from other conservative gr
Canadian Wheat Board
Defunct Canadian marketing board
Poporanism
Poporanism is a Romanian version of nationalism and populism.
Kileler incident
1910 farmer protest in Greece
protests of Dutch farmers against nitrogen policy
Protests against nitrogen policy of the third Rutte Cabinet
DAD-IS
thumb|upright=.56|FAO logo
DAD-IS is the acronym for the Domestic Animal Diversity Information System, a tool developed and maintained by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations as a part of its programme for management of animal genetic resources for food and agriculture. It includes a searchable database of information on animal breeds.
Reichserbhofgesetz
The Reichserbhofgesetz, the Hereditary Farm Law, of 1933 was a Nazi law to implement principles of blood and soil, stating that its aim was to: "preserve the farming community as the blood-source of the German people". As farmers appeared in Nazi ideology as a source of economics and racial stability, the law was implemented to protect them from the forces of modernization.
1937 peasant strike in Poland
also known as the Great Peasant Uprising
Rural Solidarity
Polish farmers' trade union
back-to-the-land movement
agrarian movement advocating a self-sufficient farming lifestyle
Ioan Kalinderu
jurist and confidant of King Carol I