
After the First World War, the improvement of working and living conditions in agriculture became an international issue for the first time. Led by the International Labour Organization and related organizations, as well as overlapping expert networks, agrarian interest groups, trade unionists, and farmer representatives, the immediate interwar and post-war years were a fertile time for international debates, knowledge production, and policy-making.Cultivating Fields of Progress traces the thematic, temporal, and geographical scope of these debates for the first time, from the plight of landless farmworkers in Europe in the early 1920s to the conditions of plantation workers in the 1950s. By using the archives of international organizations, the book considers how and to what ends questions of rural poverty and problematic labour conditions both in Europe and overseas made their way to the world stage, against a backdrop of broader discourses on social progress, decolonizaton, and economic development. Bringing the tools of social history to the study of economic and political history allows for a better understanding of the international development and circulation of ideas and theories of agriculture, as well as broader insights into the nature of power, policy, and knowledge production across a period of global change.
This work investigates how the International Labour Organization (ILO) and its associated networks transformed agricultural labor conditions into a subject of international policy and global concern between the 1920s and 1950s. Amalia Ribi Forclaz, a historian specializing in international organizations, utilizes archival research to examine the intersection of agrarian interest groups, trade unions, and policy experts. The book argues that the internationalization of rural labor issues was inextricably linked to broader historical shifts, including the evolution of social progress, the complexities of decolonization, and the trajectory of global economic development.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians and scholars of international relations recognize this text as a rigorous contribution to the study of global labor governance and institutional history. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the depth of the archival research provided by the author.
Page Count:
224
Publication Date:
2025-06-06
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192849891
ISBN-13:
9780192849892
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