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・ Center for Research in Agricultural Genomics (Bellaterra)
・ Center for Research in Computing and the Arts
・ Center for Research in Economics and Statistics
・ Center for Research in Security Prices
・ Center for Research in Urdu Language Processing
・ Center for Research Libraries
・ Center for Research of Private Economy, Zhejiang University
・ Center for research on Children, Adolescents, and the Media
・ Center for Research, Evaluation and Awareness of Dyslexia
・ Center for Research-Action on Race Relations
・ Center for Resource Solutions
・ Center for Responsible Lending
・ Center for Responsive Politics
・ Center for Retirement Research at Boston College
・ Center for Retrospective Digitization
Center for Rural Affairs
・ Center for Safe Energy
・ Center for Science
・ Center for Science and Culture
・ Center for Science in the Public Interest
・ Center for Science, Technology, and Society
・ Center for Scientific and Technical Creativity of the Youth
・ Center for Scientific Review
・ Center for Security Policy
・ Center for Sensorimotor Neural Engineering
・ Center for Sex & Culture
・ Center for Sex Positive Culture
・ Center for Short-Lived Phenomena
・ Center for Social and Economic Research
・ Center for Social Development


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Center for Rural Affairs : ウィキペディア英語版
Center for Rural Affairs

The Center for Rural Affairs () was established in 1973 as an unaffiliated nonprofit corporation under IRS code 501(c)3. The Center for Rural Affairs was formed by rural Nebraskans concerned about family farms and rural communities, and was originally located in Walthill, Nebraska.
The Center was moved down U.S. Highway 77 about 15 miles to Lyons, Nebraska in 2003 where it continues to work on family farm and ranch issues and rural community development. The Center's strongest work has focused on rural microenterprise development in Nebraska, federal farm and rural policy, research and analysis of rural economic issues and trends, and, historically, its work with beginning farmers and ranchers.〔(Center for Rural Affairs )〕
Brian Depew is the current Executive Director of the Center for Rural Affairs.〔()〕 The previous Executive Director was Chuck Hassebrook, who the Democratic gubernatorial candidate for Governor of Nebraska in the 2014 election and briefly a candidate for the United States Senate in the 2012 election.
==History==
In 1973, Don Ralston and Marty Strange were employed by the Goldenrod Hills Community Action Agency, a Nebraska non-profit corporation that was federally funded to eliminate poverty in five Northeast Nebraska counties. Don Ralston was Deputy Director and Marty Strange was a planner.
As part of a planning process involving citizen participation, Goldenrod Hills launched an agricultural redevelopment program aimed at stimulating alternative crop production (onions were a prime example) and conceiving alternative food system approaches, including a small-scale home canning center in Winnebago.
Advocacy efforts around agricultural issues were minimal. The initial staff included Laura Snake (later using her maiden name Whitewing), a Winnebago; Everett Kilzer, a long-time Walthill citizen with deep roots in the local economic system; and Lynn Spivak, who had been a VISTA volunteer with Goldenrod Hills.
In January 1973, newly re-elected President Richard Nixon decided to eliminate the federal anti-poverty programs that were the central funding source for Goldenrod Hills, and he appointed Howard Phillips to shut down the federal agency that distributed the funding. Phillips issued a lengthy instruction detailing how to close out operations.
The local reaction was strong. The Goldenrod Hills board was defiant with people like Art May, a community developer from Macy; Allen Heine, a prominent farmer/feeder from St. Helena; and Howard Swanson, a farm equipment dealer from Decatur.
As the Golden Hills Community Action Agency was not a federal body, the government lack any real power to shut down the organization. The staff was commissioned to build a survival strategy. Don Ralston and Marty Strange were commissioned by Larry Lassek, the Goldenrod Hills executive director, to develop a plan by which the service programs of Goldenrod Hills and the advocacy and development efforts might both be preserved.
May, Heine, and Swanson ultimately became those that incorporated the Center for Rural Affairs (CFRA), a separate entity from Golden Hills. With the primary goal of advocacy and development strategy, CFRA was designed to address controversial questions of economic policy affecting the agricultural base of Northeast Nebraska and to generate creative approaches to economic development. It was conceived and is largely funded privately.〔(Center for Rural Affairs )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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