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Agrarianism

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physiocracy
Physiocracy (; from the Greek for "government of nature") is an economic theory developed by a group of 18th-century Age of Enlightenment French economists. They believed that the wealth of nations derived solely from the value of "land agriculture" or "land development" and that agricultural products should be highly priced. Their theories originated in France and were most popular during the second half of the 18th century. Physiocracy became one of the first well-developed theories of economics.
Georgism
thumb|right|Georgist campaign button from the 1890s. The cat on the badge refers to the slogan "Do you see the cat?" from a story by Congressman James G. Maguire. He compared understanding the Single Tax to being able to make out a cat in a picture of a landscape.
agrarianism
thumb|Agrarian parties often use the four-leaf clover as their symbol, such as on this former logo of the [[Polish People's Party]]
agrarian society
community whose economy is based on crops and farmland
Green armies
Peasant Army in Russian Civil War of 1918-1919
Tableau économique
18th century physiocratic economic model
agrarian socialism
political ideology which combines an agrarian way of life with a socialist economic system
Agriculturalism
Agriculturalism, also known as the School of Agrarianism, the School of Agronomists, the School of Tillers, and in Chinese as the Nongjia (), was an early agrarian Chinese philosophy that advocated peasant utopian communalism and egalitarianism.
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.
homesteading
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