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The Rise of Agrarian Democracy: The United Farmers and Farm Women of Alberta 1909-1921.

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The UFA/UFWA launched the most successful agrarian revolt in North American history.

This work details one of the greatest mass democratic movements in Canada.

The result is an investigation in western and agrarian history and economics.

A path is laid from the farmers' inherited ideas and common experience, gender assumptions, class opposition, agrarian ideals and a collective sense of responsibility, co-operation and confidence.

We follow the development of a grassroots movement whose astonishing political success culminated in the election of the United Farmers of Alberta in 1921 which governed the province for over a decade.;There is much more on offer than a purely institutional study.

Rennie examines this elemental period in Canadian democracy within the cultural, social and community context at the core of the movement's inception.

The author provides a solid and balanced focus on organization, the role of gender, the relationships between farmers and other classes and the role of education in the movement.;The result of meticulous research, this work is of unique interest to the study of co-operative movements worldwide and delivers with impressive clarity and accuracy valuable insight to the academic body of reform movements and gender history in this country.

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£64.99
Product Details
University of Toronto Press
1442682205 / 9781442682207
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
05/01/2001
English
271 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%