Abstract

The characteristics of farmers’ protests in Poland over the last 30 years are a pretext to verify the hypothesis that says that in their relationship with the state, farmers less and less often resort to this form of fighting for their own interests. Rather, the protest becomes an action supporting their activity in the institutionalised sphere. They consider activities based on permanent organisational forms to be the most effective (producers groups, trade unions, interest groups), not direct protest actions. We can say that the state–farmer relationship has evolved over the last 30 years from a model of authoritarian corporatism to a model of institutionalised collaboration, in which social groups and interest organisations are oriented towards cooperation. They are well aware of their interests and needs.

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