Ensuring the well-being of farmers, their families, farmworkers, and that of their communities is high on the agenda of governments and policy makers in OECD countries. The quality of agricultural jobs (e.g. working conditions) and quality of life aspects such as environmental quality, health, depopulation of rural areas, isolation, crime, discrimination, and access to knowledge together determine the well-being of those active in the agricultural sector. Relevant policy design has tended to be hampered by serious data gaps. By focusing on different dimensions of well-being, this paper proposes a framework for social issues in agriculture to identify cross-cutting challenges. Seven policy examples, covering diverse social issues such as mental health, developing social connections in isolated rural areas, and inclusiveness of Indigenous Peoples and those with disabilities, confirm the need to look beyond traditional sectoral policies and to address social issues from a broader policy perspective. Only a multipronged approach can successfully remove the barriers that hinder opportunities for all farmers and their communities.
Social issues in agriculture in rural areas
Working paper
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
-
17 February 202673 Pages
-
Working paper
Economic analysis, literature findings and synthesis
28 May 202590 Pages -
Working paper
Impacts on the triple challenge and cost‑benefits analysis
22 May 202527 Pages -
Working paper
A literature review on policy effectiveness
9 May 202547 Pages -
Working paper
Case study of the Australian beef and wheat sectors
2 April 202580 Pages -
21 February 202570 Pages
-
Working paper
Evidence from 40 countries
19 February 202539 Pages -
14 February 202529 Pages
Related publications
-
22 November 202446 Pages
-
30 January 202337 Pages
-
Working paper27 July 202254 Pages
-
Working paper
The case of the wind turbine manufacturing industry
2 February 202141 Pages -
Working paper26 October 202081 Pages
-
23 July 202035 Pages