U.S. Farm Bills and Policy Reforms:  Ideological Conflicts Over World Trade, Renewable Energy, and Sustainable Agriculture
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The research described in this book was funded by a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship; a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency—Science to Achieve Results Graduate Fellowship; a MacArthur Interdisciplinary Global Change, Sustainability, and Justice Fellowship; and a University of Minnesota Graduate Fellowship. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this document are solely those of the author. The National Science Foundation, Environmental Protection Agency, and other funders have not officially endorsed this document, and the views expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation, Environmental Protection Agency, or any other funder.

Excerpts of text, tables, and figures were reprinted with kind permission from the following: Springer Science + Business Media: Agriculture and Human Values, “(Bio)fueling farm policy: The biofuels boom and the 2008 farm bill,” DOI 10.1007/s10460-009-9247-0 (2009, date online) by Nadine Lehrer; University of Newcastle and Taylor & Francis: Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 53(5), “Shifting paths to conservation: Policy discourses and the 2008 U.S. farm bill” (2010) by Nadine Lehrer and Dennis Becker; and University of Minnesota—Twin Cities doctoral dissertation: “From competition to national security: Policy change and policy stability in the 2008 farm bill” (2008) by Nadine Lehrer.