Tobacco farming is extremely labour intensive. This has a major impact on farming families who must provide much of the unpaid labour. The use of child labour in tobacco growing is widespread, with children often being pulled out of school at key harvesting times. Women are negatively affected as well, as is food production for the family as a result. As the international tobacco industry becomes ever more powerful and consolidated, the cheap (and often unpaid) labour of women is a key factor that ensures the large profit margins of tobacco multinationals.
Blair A. Rutherford has written: 'Working on the margins' -- subject(s): Postcolonialism, Race relations, Tobacco farmers, Tobacco workers
Tobacco farmers.
They do not produce any edible products since tobacco farmers by definition grow tobacco.
Md. Akmal. Hussain has written: 'A socio-economic study of a sample farmers in a tobacco growing area of Rangpur District' -- subject(s): Agriculture, Economic aspects of Agriculture, Economic conditions, Farmers, Social conditions
Jeffrey R. Kerr-Ritchie has written: 'Freedpeople in the tobacco South' -- subject(s): Economic conditions, History, Freedmen, Tobacco farms, African American farmers
The Maryland policy that required tobacco farmers to plant corn as well as tobacco was for the good of all. Tobacco had become such a cash crop, people neglected to plant corn and the food was becoming scarce.
Tobacco
The battle between Kentucky tobacco farmers and tobacco companies between 1904-1909 is commonly referred to as the "Tobacco Wars." This conflict arose as farmers sought to negotiate better prices and terms for their crops, while tobacco companies aimed to control production and pricing. The struggle highlighted the tensions between agricultural producers and large corporations, ultimately leading to significant changes in the tobacco industry's structure and pricing practices.
nothing
They grew tobacco, rice, and indigo
The Black Patch War
They grew tobacco, rice, and indigo