The Dictionary of Human Geography

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dominance of small farms worked mainly
by family labour to a system whereby
most land was owned by large estates, let
as large farms at commercial rents to cap-
italist tenant farmers and worked by wage
labour. Both the chronology and causes of
this second shift have been the subject of
much debate. There is no agreement over
whether the key period of change was the
sixteenth, seventeenth or eighteenth cen-
tury, but the primacy once accorded to
enclosureis now usually displaced by
causes such as population change and
long-term price movements.
(2) Technical changes, particularly in the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, have
loomed large in accounts of the Agricul-
tural Revolution. In the arable sector, the
key innovation was the introduction of
more complex crop rotations including
clover and turnips, which provided high-
quality fodder for animals, thus allowing
the area of grassland to be reduced without
decreasing the production of animal prod-
ucts. It now seems clear that these and
associated changes allowed an extension
of the arable area between 1750 and 1850
(Campbell and Overton, 1993; William-
son, 2002). In the pastoral sector, technical
improvements were related largely to se-
lective animal breeding aimed at increasing
carcass weight, decreasing the age at ma-
turity (slaughter) for meat animals or in-
creasing the yields of wool or milk.
(3) Until recently, discussions of agrarian
change were not informed by any direct
accounts of productivity, but measure-
ments of changes in productivity and
their connection with technical change
have since been placed on a more secure
statistical footing (Wrigley, 1985a; Allen,
1992, 1999; Overton, 1996).

In the early twentieth century, the historio-
graphical emphasis was on technical and social
change, and the most important changes were
held to have taken place in the late eighteenth
and early nineteenth centuries, in parallel with
what was then thought to be the key period
of industrialization. Chambers and Mingay’s
classic (1966) account more or less repeated
this framework, but its restatement coincided
with a series of major revisions: Jones (1965)
identified the century from 1650 to 1750 as
the key period, while Kerridge (1967) argued
that the Agricultural Revolution’s key achieve-
ments were between 1570 and 1673. The
debates have multiplied ever since.

Although recent work has generally focused
on productivity, different measures of product-
ivity have been emphasized. Wrigley (1985a)
has stressed the growth of labour productivity
between 1550 and 1850, and the way in which
that allowed a wider restructuring of the econ-
omy through a shift in occupational structure
away from agriculture towards manufacturing
and services. Grain yields are known to have
doubled between 1500 and 1800. Allen
(1992; cf. Glennie, 1991) put the growth in
wheat yields in the seventeenth century at
centre stage, and in his subsequent (1999)
account emphasized the growth in total food
output between 1600 and 1750 and between
1800 and 1850, as well as the growth of wheat
yields. Overton (1996) has emphasized three
features of the century after 1750: the unpre-
cedented increase in total food production im-
plied by the tripling of population over any
previously achieved level, a rise in overall
grain yields, and the fact that these productiv-
ity changes coincided with a period of funda-
mental technical change. Turner, Beckett and
Afton (2001) have argued that the key
changes took place between 1800 and 1850,
though they pay no attention to the un-
doubted achievements of the period before
1700.
A series of major and historically unpreced-
ented achievements can be identified in Eng-
lish agriculture for every identified sub-period
between 1550 and 1850, therefore, and it is
probably unhelpful to isolate one particular
element and identify the period of its achieve-
ment as ‘the Agricultural Revolution’. Such a
broad perspective sits comfortably alongside
recent views of industrialization as a process
that began well before 1750. lst

Suggested reading
Allen (1992); Campbell and Overton (1991);
Overton (1996); Wrigley (1988).

agro-food system According to the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD),‘thesetofactivitiesand
relationships that interact to determine what,
how much, by what methods and for whom
food is produced and distributed’ (Whatmore,
2002b, pp. 57–8). The most commonly ac-
knowledged sectors/spheres that comprise the
agro-food system are agrarian production itself
(farming); agricultural science and technology
products and services to farming (upstream in-
dustries); food processing, marketing, distribu-
tion and retail (downstream industries); and
household food purchasing, preparation and

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AGRO-FOOD SYSTEM
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