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Frederick H. Buttel is Associate Professor of Rural Sociology at Cornell University and a member of the Program in Science, Society, and Technology. He recently coauthoredEnvironment, Energy, and Society andLabor and the Environment: An Analysis and Annotated Bibliography on Workplace Environmental Quality in the United States.

Mary T. Dailey teaches sociology at F.S.U., and has done extensive work in incorporating agriculture into philosophy, sociology, and anthropology. She recently experimented with integrating the Philosophy for Children Program idea with agricultural programs in Costa Rica.

Theodore E. Downing is an Associate Research Professor in the Department of Anthropology and an Anthropologist in the Bureau of Applied Research at the University of Arizona. He has worked on agricultural development problems in Latin America and the Middle East, specializing in the socio-economic development of coffee producers, the internationalization of capital in agriculture, and the social impact of irrigation. Currently, he is developing alternative strategies for the ecodevelopment of small ruminants (sheep and goats) producers in the Mexican tropical highlands.

Maynard Kaufman is Professor of Religion, Western Michigan University. He is currently writing a series of essays,Visions of a New Earth: Exploration of Utopian and Apocalyptic Expressions in Contemporary Culture.

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Buttel, F.H., Dailey, M.T., Downing, T.E. et al. Book reviews. Agric Hum Values 1, 29–35 (1984). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01530615

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