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About John E. Ikerd
John was raised on a small dairy farm in southwest Missouri and received his BS, MS, and Ph.D. degrees in agricultural economics from the University of Missouri. He worked in private industry for a time and spent thirty years in various professorial positions at North Carolina State University, Oklahoma State University, University of Georgia, and the University of Missouri before retiring in early 2000. Since retiring, he spends most of his time writing and speaking on issues related to sustainability with an emphasis on economics and agriculture. He currently resides in Fairfield, IA with his wife, Ellen, two dogs, and two cats. Ikerd is author of Essentials of Economic Sustainability, Sustainable Capitalism, A Return to Common Sense, Small Farms are Real Farms, Crisis and Opportunity: Sustainability in American Agriculture, and A Revolution of the Middle. More complete background information and a wide selection of writings are available at http://web.missouri.edu/~ikerdj/ or http://www.johnikerd.com.
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Blog postSeveral Democratic presidential candidates are promising to reform antitrust policies to restore competition to markets—including agricultural markets. Some Republicans also have expressed concern about the monopoly power of corporations—particularly in social media and financial markets. As a candidate, Donald Trump talked about breaking up the big drug companies. However, political … Continue reading2 years ago Read more
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Blog postIt’s long past time for transformational change in U.S. farm policy. A persistent promise of U.S. farm policy has been to support “family farms,” even as each new farm bill has resulted in fewer and larger farms and fewer farm families. Farm bills from their beginning in the 1930s through … Continue reading2 years ago Read more
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Blog postI am pleased that several presidential candidates have taken a strong position on restoring competition to the agricultural/food sector of the economy. As an agricultural economist, I agree with their contention that today’s agri-food system is “not” a free market agricultural economy. With increasing corporate concentration and vertical integration, the … Continue reading2 years ago Read more
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Blog postWe are now seeing a corporate takeover of dairy production, which is the last bastion of full-time, independent family farms in animal agriculture. Poultry was the first to come under corporate control, the second was beef, then pork, and now dairy. The corporatization of each sector has been a bit … Continue reading3 years ago Read more
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Blog postThe Constitution of the United States gives very few economic responsibilities to government. “Coining” U.S. currency and regulating interstate and international trade are the only two specifically mentioned. The economic theory of “self-regulating” markets was the prominent at the time. Economists believed that periods of cyclical unemployment would be corrected … Continue reading3 years ago Read more
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Blog postJesus was born into the world that was filled with violence, bitterness, pride, and hatred. In these respects, a world not all that different from today. He didn’t have the noble birth the Jewish people expected for their Messiah or savior. They had expected a ruler to reign over other. … Continue reading3 years ago Read more
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Blog postIf we are to preserve our democracy and continue living in a civilized society, we must make government work. Unfortunately, too many Americans no longer believe that government can work. Too many others think government should work for them as individuals rather than as members of society. As a result, … Continue reading3 years ago Read more
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Blog postWhen Donald Trump became President he promised to replace the horrible “trade agreements” of his predecessors with his own great “trade deals.” His trade negotiations have resulted in agreements that include a few new trade deals that border on extortion and a continuing trade war with China. Such negotiations are … Continue reading3 years ago Read more
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Blog postDo we live in a world of abundance or a world of scarcity? The economic world is a world of scarcity. The economy is a means of allocating “scarce” resources among competing uses or ends. Scarcity mean there is not enough for everyone to have all of everything they need … Continue reading3 years ago Read more
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Blog postOver the past few months, I have heard and read several urgent warnings of an impending civilizational collapse from highly respected voices in the sustainability movement. Their concerns tend to focus on climate change, but environmental degradation, fossil energy depletion, loss of biodiversity, and growing social and economic inequity are … Continue reading3 years ago Read more
Local, diverse and resilient – the new culture of food
Long embraced by corporations who are driven only by the desire for profit, industrial agriculture wastes precious resources and spews millions of tons of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere each year, exacerbating climate change and threatening the very earth and water on which we depend. However, this dominant system, from which Americans obtain most of their food, is being slowly supplanted by a new paradigm.
The Emergent Agriculture is a collection of fourteen thematic essays on sustainability viewed through the lens of farming. Arguing that industrial food production is incompatible with the realities of nature, science, and ethics, this lyrical narrative makes the case for a locally based food system which is:
- Stable in the face of economic uncertainty
- Resilient in the face of environmental variability
- Grounded in stewardship of the land, on attaching value to food and the craft involved in producing it, and on respecting the dignity of farmers, consumer,s and livestock
A revolution in food production is underway. Written from the vantage point of an ecologist who is also a farmer, The Emergent Agriculture is essential reading for anyone interested in food security and the potential for growing local economies. Food for thought about the future of food.
Gary Kleppel is a professor of biology at the SUNY Albany, where he focuses on sustainable agriculture, conservation-based grazing, and the ecology of human-dominated landscapes. He and his wife Pam are owners of Longfield Farm, where they produce grass-fed lamb, wool, free range chickens and eggs, and artisanal breads
John Ikerd combines an engaging story of personal transformation with a sweeping analysis and call for social change based on shared insights into what we know in our hearts to be real, true, right, and good - our common sense.
By interweaving life lessons with economic, political, scientific, and philosophical understandings, Ikerd paints an inspiring vision for human harmony and "a new word of order."
Dr. John Ikerd holds the title of Professor Emeritus of Agricultural Economics, having served on the faculties of four major state universities during his 30-year academic career: North Carolina State University, Oklahoma State University, the University of Georgia, and the University of Missouri.
In searching for the roots of the farm financial crisis of the 1980s, Dr. Ikerd came to the conclusion that American and global societies are in the midst of a great transition. This transition is a movement out of the industrial era, which has dominated Western thinking for the past 200 years, into a fundamentally different time in human history. During such transitions, old ways of thinking are no longer relevant but new ways have not yet been fully developed. During such times, our only means of finding truth is by relying on our common sense - our shared insights into what we know in our hearts to be real, true, right, and good. Our intelligent insight, our common sense, must provide the foundation of first principles upon which we can build a new science, a new economy, and a new society.
Since retiring from the University of Missouri in 2000, Dr. Ikerd has traveled extensively across the North American continent and beyond, speaking and writing about the critical questions of sustainability and calling for a return to common sense. He is also the author of Sustainable Capitalism: A Matter of Common Sense, from Kumarian Press, and Crisis and Opportunity: Sustainability in American Agriculture, from the University of Nebraska Press.