These 10 collected articles by USDA Rural Development agricultural economist Charles Ling were originally printed in Rural Cooperatives magazine to examine the nature of cooperatives and their place in our free-market economy. “Essential Economic Roles of Farmer Cooperatives” (Published in the Nov./Dec. 2013 issue) summarizes the essence of this work. “What Cooperatives Are (and Aren’t)” (Nov./Dec. 2009) and “What Cooperatives Do” (March/April 2010), explain the economic structure of cooperatives and their role in the marketplace. Together, they examine the economic theory of cooperation as advanced, respectively, by Ivan V. Emelianoff and Edwin G. Nourse. These writings constitute a comprehensive framework for understanding cooperatives. T...
Cooperatives are often thought to require open membership policies, use patronage-based financing, ...
Smallholder farmers can benefit from market-oriented agriculture when they get support from various ...
The article explores cooperatives in China through their identity as social networks and their behav...
Cooperatives are the aggregates of economic units, such as farms. The cooperative is neither a horiz...
Cooperatives represent an alternative to large-scale corporate farms as well as to independent unaff...
The nature of the cooperative is viewed as a composite picture of three facets: (1) the unique struc...
"February, 1972""Several methods of economic organization are used today in America. These are indiv...
markdownabstractCooperatives received significant attention in recent years as an alternative to inv...
Much of the current research on agricultural cooperatives is biased towards weaknesses of the cooper...
Since 1980, agricultural economists have begun to reexamine fundamental issues in the theory of agri...
Nebraska has a history of cooperatives in agriculture. The most common types are agricultural market...
North Dakota and Minnesota are currently witnessing a renewal in the growth of coopera-tive enterpri...
Abstract: What is a cooperative? Until the early 1960s much of the theoretical debate focused on w...
Cooperatives are private businesses in which members are also the owners and the customers. Coopera...
This publication is written for audiences at the secondary and postsecondary levels, or for anyone i...
Cooperatives are often thought to require open membership policies, use patronage-based financing, ...
Smallholder farmers can benefit from market-oriented agriculture when they get support from various ...
The article explores cooperatives in China through their identity as social networks and their behav...
Cooperatives are the aggregates of economic units, such as farms. The cooperative is neither a horiz...
Cooperatives represent an alternative to large-scale corporate farms as well as to independent unaff...
The nature of the cooperative is viewed as a composite picture of three facets: (1) the unique struc...
"February, 1972""Several methods of economic organization are used today in America. These are indiv...
markdownabstractCooperatives received significant attention in recent years as an alternative to inv...
Much of the current research on agricultural cooperatives is biased towards weaknesses of the cooper...
Since 1980, agricultural economists have begun to reexamine fundamental issues in the theory of agri...
Nebraska has a history of cooperatives in agriculture. The most common types are agricultural market...
North Dakota and Minnesota are currently witnessing a renewal in the growth of coopera-tive enterpri...
Abstract: What is a cooperative? Until the early 1960s much of the theoretical debate focused on w...
Cooperatives are private businesses in which members are also the owners and the customers. Coopera...
This publication is written for audiences at the secondary and postsecondary levels, or for anyone i...
Cooperatives are often thought to require open membership policies, use patronage-based financing, ...
Smallholder farmers can benefit from market-oriented agriculture when they get support from various ...
The article explores cooperatives in China through their identity as social networks and their behav...