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The Sabotage of Land Reform Movements

The Sabotage of Land Reform Movements Retirements 389 administrators who recognized the mathematical rigor and the statistical appro- priateness of the research reported in our pages. And to the men and women of, first. Business Press, many now retired because of the liquidation of their enterprise, and second, of Lancaster Press and Tapsco, Inc., who, every quarter, have produced a magazine that delighted this bibliophile's heart. As I have pointed out many times, this scholarly enterprise is a demonstration of the practicality of what Georgists call "cooperative individualism." Two heads are better than three if only the two are cooperating. Scholarly journals work a year ahead to allow time for further research, con- sultation and revision. So any shortcomings in our 1989 volume and some or most issues in 1990 should not be charged to our successors. But we look foru^ard with keen anticipation to the succeeding volumes. We hope our col- laborators and readers will, too. By our efforts, though it often does not seem that way, we are building a society without special advantages for some—without privilege—a free society. The struggle that enriches our lives is its own reward. EVERY COUNTRY in the world, including the United States, Britain, France and Germany, needs http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png American Journal of Economics and Sociology Wiley

The Sabotage of Land Reform Movements

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Publisher
Wiley
Copyright
Copyright © 1988 Wiley Subscription Services
ISSN
0002-9246
eISSN
1536-7150
DOI
10.1111/j.1536-7150.1988.tb02060.x
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Retirements 389 administrators who recognized the mathematical rigor and the statistical appro- priateness of the research reported in our pages. And to the men and women of, first. Business Press, many now retired because of the liquidation of their enterprise, and second, of Lancaster Press and Tapsco, Inc., who, every quarter, have produced a magazine that delighted this bibliophile's heart. As I have pointed out many times, this scholarly enterprise is a demonstration of the practicality of what Georgists call "cooperative individualism." Two heads are better than three if only the two are cooperating. Scholarly journals work a year ahead to allow time for further research, con- sultation and revision. So any shortcomings in our 1989 volume and some or most issues in 1990 should not be charged to our successors. But we look foru^ard with keen anticipation to the succeeding volumes. We hope our col- laborators and readers will, too. By our efforts, though it often does not seem that way, we are building a society without special advantages for some—without privilege—a free society. The struggle that enriches our lives is its own reward. EVERY COUNTRY in the world, including the United States, Britain, France and Germany, needs

Journal

American Journal of Economics and SociologyWiley

Published: Jan 1, 1988

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