![]() |
|
| PURPOSE | |
| PROGRAMS & EVENTS | |
| RELATED LINKS | |
| CONTACT |
Dr. Jackson’s writings include both papers and books. His most recent work, Rooted in the Land: Essays on Community and Place, co-edited with William Vitek, was released by Yale University Press in 1996. Becoming Native to This Place was published in 1994 and sketches his vision for the resettlement of America’s rural communities. Altars of Unhewn Stone appeared in 1987 and Meeting the Expectations of the Land, edited with Wendell Berry and Bruce Colman, was published in 1984. New Roots for Agriculture, 1980, outlines the basis for the agricultural research at The Land Institute. Jackson founded The Land Institute, which is located in Salina, Kansas,
in 1976 to seek an alternative to annual planting of field crops. The
work of the Land Institute has been featured extensively in the popular
media including The Atlantic Monthly, Audubon, The MacNeil-Lehrer News
Hour, and National Public Radio’s “All Things Considered.”
Life magazine named Wes Jackson one of the 18 individuals they predict
will be among the 100 “important Americans of the 20th century.”
He is a recipient of the Pew Conservation Scholars award (1990), a MacArthur
Fellowship (1992), and Right Livelihood Award (2000). |