Professor emeritus of economic sociology at the Sapienza University of Rome he was formerly also professor at the University of Siena (1966-1977) and president of the Italian National Institute for Agricultural Economics (INEA) from January 1976 to February 1991.[1]
He worked, among others, for FAO, mainly in Latin America,[2] and was one of the founders of the European Review of Agricultural Economics and first president of the European Association of Agricultural Economists (1973-1993).
His career and fields of interest can be divided into four periods:[3]
In the first period – from 1952 to the early 1960s – his research work was mainly centred on the analysis of the impact of agrarian reform and public investments for the expansion of irrigation facilities in Southern Italy. These activities were carried out at first in the Agricultural Economics Institute of the Faculty of Agricultural Sciences in Portici (Naples). Later he moved to Rome, to design first and then direct the joint FAO/INEA study on land reform[4]
In the second period – from 1964 to 1976 – his dominant interests focused on the critical steps and overall consequences of the formation of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), and the need for institutional innovations in agricultural planning at the regional and sub-regional level.
In the third period – 1976 to 1990 – his intellectual engagements were to a great extent directed towards INEA, the Italian Institute for Agricultural Economics, strengthening its contacts and cooperation with other Italian and European research institutions[5]
In the fourth period – 1991 until now – his attention turned to new subjects and challenges, from the changing role of agriculture and rural areas to the incoming effects of globalization.
In summary, his research interests cover a number of important issues: economic development (economics of irrigation, land reform, productivity), the construction of the European Community/Union, conflicts in international trade, world food problems,[6] the effects of globalization on European agriculture, rural development issues and land uses. In his long career as an expert in the fields of agricultural policy, he has participated actively in international debate, mostly with regard to the structural reforms that would boost the social economic transformation of rural Europe after the second world war.
He contributed to underlining the connections between agricultural economics, land planning, social sciences and history.[7]
^Misiani S. and Dore R. (Editors), Non tutto è da buttare via. Territorio, riforme, politica, Associazione Alessandro Bartola, Ancona, 2015. ISBN9788894062908
^Barbero G., Realizaciones y problemas de la reforma agraria en Bolivia, El Trimestre Economico, vol. XXVIII, Messico, ottobre-dicembre, 1961.
^Misiani S., "Gli orizzonti delle riforme strutturali nell’itinerario intellettuale di Giuseppe Barbero", in Agriregionieuropa, anno 10 n°38, Set 2014, (agriregionieuropa.univpm.it).
^Di Mambro A. (Editor), Storia dell'Inea : 80° anniversario 1928-2008, Ministero delle politiche agricole alimentari e forestali, INEA, Rome, 2009. ISBN9788881451432
^Barbero G., World food problems: A note on the World Food Conference, Rome, 5–16 November 1974, European Review of Agricultural Economics, Volume 2, Issue 2, 1974, Pages 151–167; Idem, Gli alimenti, in Gallino L. and Castronovo V., (Editor), La società contemporanea, vol. I, UTET, Torino, 1987.