Agricultural Co-operation in the Soviet Union (1929) examines agriculture in the USSR as the government was restructuring all national economic life and enterprise on a state socialist basis. It looks at the significance of farming co-operatives in Soviet agricultural planning and the work of the agricultural co-operatives.
Originally published in 1971, this book resulted from a 2-year study of the implications of the Common Market agricultural policy in relation to agricultural marketing in Britain.
Maternal morbidity in the U.S. is staggering given the acceleration of medical innovation, and disparities in maternal outcomes are stark. This book will explore the role of AI in mitigating these disparities and better interrogate AI’s strengths and weaknesses in the changing maternal health landscape.
Featuring accessible introductions to AI topics, real-world case studies, and actionable policy recommendations, this volume serves as an essential guide for policymakers, technologists, and those studying AI's complex relationship with democratic governance.
This book examines how contemporary artificial intelligence systems are reshaping social, political, and economic life with unequal consequences. Bringing together critical scholarship from across disciplines, it investigates how AI redistributes power, produces new forms of exclusion, and reconfigures longstanding structures of inequality.