Jackson, Wes. New Roots for Agriculture. Lincoln, NE, and London: University of Nebraska Press, 1985.
Abstract
"The plowshare may well have
destroyed more options for future generations than the sword," writes
Wes Jackson in a review of practices that have brought U.S. agriculture
to the edge of disaster. Tillage has hastened the erosion of
irreplaceable topsoil everywhere and a technology based on fossil fuels
has increased yields for short-term profits, leaving crops ever more
vulnerable to diseases, pests, and droughts. Such, says Jackson, is
"the failure of success." As high-technology agriculture becomes more
wasteful and expensive, more farmers are being forced off the land into
bankruptcy. Jackson's major solution calls for the development of plant
combinations that yield food while holding the soil and renewing its
nutrients without plowing or applying fossil-fuel-based fertilizers or
pesticides. His new way of raising crops, by working with the soil's
natural systems, would keep the world's bread-basket producing
perpetually.