Full metadata
As technology has evolved over time and the U.S. population increases each year, this thesis focuses on the ways in which food production has shifted from the original farm to table to industrialized, processed food systems. Through a rationalization perspective, this research looks to the history and repercussions of industrial agriculture as it has shifted over time. The term over-industrialization is used to operationalize the state of our current production methods. These methods focus extensively on the least expensive and most rapid methods to produce large yields of food products and pay no mind to ethics, respect of culture, land, or quality of products. Today, there is a shroud the corporations have placed over food production to ensure a “what we can’t see doesn’t affect us” belief system. In this way, the thesis provides insight on past, current, and future methods of manufacturing. I conclude that although plausible alternatives are present, continued research and substantial producer and consumer changes must be our main priority.
- Brodkin, Emma (Author)
- Keahey, Jennifer (Thesis director)
- Perkins, Tracy (Committee member)
- Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
- School of Sustainability (Contributor)
- School of Social and Behavioral Sciences (Contributor)
- 2023-04-12 11:59:21
- 2023-04-21 02:27:09
- 1 year 7 months ago