His parents are politically apathetic his mum will vote Conservative at a push but he remembers
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His parents are politically apathetic (his mum will vote Conservative "at a push"), but he remembers watching the 1997 election-night coverage at home in Herefordshire as a precocious 12-year old, "seeing Tony Blair get in, and feeling absolute horror," he says. But it was in 1997 that, after enjoying the lion's share of the youth vote for 18 years, the Conservatives yielded the votes of half a million 20- to 34-year-olds to New Labour.Vaughan traces his support for the Tory party back to that slump. At the last general election, the Tories' share of the vote fell in nine out of 10 major student constituencies, this time losing out to the anti-war, anti-fees Lib Dems. Some campus branches have said they are the only political presence on campus."The Cameron effect has been a long time coming.
"When we have asked for feedback from branches, especially university branches, we have heard that they are more active than the local Lib Dem or Labour branch. Since the recent leadership contest, however, their numbers have shot up by 20 per cent. They are now the largest political group on the Essex campus, which was once renowned for strident politics of the left-wing variety."Recently CF has seen a surge of activity not only on campuses but also in urban and rural areas," says Sarah Southern, the national organiser. Before David Cameron and his limited-edition Converse trainers strode purposefully into the Opposition leader's job a few short months ago, the thought of a Conservative without grandchildren was anathema to many people. Conservative Future (CF), the organisation that has replaced the Young Conservatives, and of which Vaughan is chairman, had a flatlining membership of 15,000. Nick Vaughan is a nice chap. He picks up visiting journalists from the station in his car.
He buys them drinks and introduces them to his fellow Essex University students He makes a mean cup of tea But there's something curious about Nick He's 21, and he's a Tory. "All our agriculture students who want a job in agriculture get one," says Vipond, "and they usually get the job they want.". According to Professor Ellis of Reading, there has been a big increase in the number of applicants for agricultural-related courses this autumn With any luck, they will also get jobs. "Everything these days has a slant towards sustainability and the environment. Course content now includes issues such as climate change and pollution." Ucas lists 34 degree courses with agriculture as a single subject, but an impressive 1,081 courses on the environment.The signs are that the students like the new degree programmes. Writtle says in its prospectus that "our classrooms do not have walls", and its agriculture students spend plenty of time outdoors for case-study work and hands-on work experience.John Vipond, an agriculture lecturer, says that Writtle has changed its courses considerably; they are now more vocational and far more concerned with the environment. It now has a wide range of degrees, including a BSc in agriculture with business management, and agriculture and the environment.
While applicants dropped during the foot-and-mouth outbreak, says assistant registrar Anne Cleary, things are picking up again and "people are more aware of what they can do with their land, and its recreational uses."Like Harper Adams, Writtle College in Essex has offered land-based courses since the 1890s. One of its most popular courses is food quality management, and it also offers agriculture and mechanisation, which includes engineering modules. "It's an applied degree of all the sciences."Harper Adams University College in Shropshire began life as an agriculture college in the 1890s after a bequest from wealthy gentleman farmer Thomas Harper Adams Today it has eight BSc and two HND agriculture courses. Reading has as many women as men on the BSc in agriculture, and more women on animal science and rural management courses. The only course in which men outnumber women is the BSc in agriculture business.Unlike some other subjects, plenty of agriculture courses are also offered outside the university sector at further education colleges But this doesn't mean they're easy "It's a very difficult subject," says Professor Ellis. At the University of Wales's college at Aberystwyth, women students now make up 42 per cent of agriculture-related courses Ellis says this is part of a national trend. One variant of Reading's basic agriculture degree is agriculture business management, whose graduates may end up working inproperty management or as part of a supermarket buying team.And, according to Farmers Weekly, women are applying to agriculture courses in larger numbers than ever before.
Today's wheat stocks are tiny." And recent years have seen the introduction of new, broader degree programmes. People were influenced by them to such an extent that applications to agriculture courses dropped sharply. As a result, programmes became narrower, mainly attracting people from rural backgrounds.However, says Professor Ellis, it's all a misconception: "Those mountains don't exist any more. Yet almost 13 per cent of the UK's working population is involved in food production - and that number increases if you include alcohol. In the Eighties, the image of agriculture was damaged by pictures of the grain mountains so popularised by the press. It's also home to the Centre for Agriculture Strategy.In the world's poorest countries, two billion people depend directly on agriculture for their income. However, Professor Ellis says that in the UK many people are dismissive of agriculture as a subject for study because it's seen as such a minor part of the economy. He's the head of the school of agriculture, policy and development at the University of Reading, which includes the departments of agricultural and food economics, and international and rural development.


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