A farmworker, farmhand or agricultural worker is someone employed for labor in agriculture. In labor law, the term "farmworker" is sometimes used more narrowly, applying only to a hired worker involved in agricultural production, including harvesting, but not to a worker in other on-farm jobs, such as picking fruit.
Farm workers on a field near Mount Williamson in Inyo County, California. This photograph is by Ansel Adams.
Sudanese farmer reviews cantaloupe production, south of Khartoum
A Rwandan farmworker
Farmworkers in Fort Valley, Georgia in 2019
A farmer is a person engaged in agriculture, raising living organisms for food or raw materials. The term usually applies to people who do some combination of raising field crops, orchards, vineyards, poultry, or other livestock. A farmer might own the farmland or might work as a laborer on land owned by others. In most developed economies, a "farmer" is usually a farm owner (landowner), while employees of the farm are known as farm workers. However, in other older definitions a farmer was a person who promotes or improves the growth of plants, land, or crops or raises animals by labor and attention.
Woman working in a rice field near Junagadh, Gujarat, India, in 2013.
Afghani farmers learning about greenhouses
A farmer in Nicaragua
Meeting of the Eastern Illinois Beekeepers Association, 1914