ABSTRACT

In an increasingly global world, societies are being provisioned from a bewildering array of sources as new countries and new food commodities are drawn into international markets. Globalising Food provides an innovative contribution to the area of political economy of agriculture, food and consumption through a revealing investigation of the globalisation and restructuring of localised agricultural sectors and food systems.
The book draws on new theoretical perspectives and wide-ranging case studies from Britain, the USA, India, South Africa, New Zealand and Latin America. The key themes addresses range from giant multinational food corporations, rural industrialisation and World Bank policies, to the regulation of pollution, labour relations, urban food politics and environmental sustainability. Globalising Food offers important insights into the problems, consequences and limits of the industrialisation of agriculture and the provisioning of food in a global world as we approach the new millenium.

chapter 1|23 pages

Agrarian Questions

Global appetite, local metabolism: nature, culture, and industry in fin-desiècle agro-food systems

part I|61 pages

Institutions, Embeddedness and Agrarian Trajectories

chapter 2|16 pages

Regional Integration and the Family Farm in the Mercosul Countries

New theoretical approaches as supports for alternative strategies

chapter 3|17 pages

Multiple Trajectories of Rural Industrialisation

An agrarian critique of industrial restructuring and the new institutionalism

chapter 4|20 pages

Agrarian Questions in the Making of the Knitwear Industry in Tirupur, India

A historical geography of the industrial present

chapter I|7 pages

Commentary On Part I

Theoretical reflections

part II|36 pages

Restructuring, Industry and Regional Dynamics

chapter II|6 pages

Commentary On Part II

Regions in global context? Restructuring, industry, and regional dynamics

part III|51 pages

Globalisation, Value and Regulation in the Commodity System

chapter 7|17 pages

Creating Space For Food

The distinctiveness of recent agrarian development

chapter 8|27 pages

Agro-Industrial Just-In-Time

The chicken industry and postwar American capitalism

chapter III|6 pages

Commentary On Part III

‘Creating space for food' and ‘agro-industrial just-in-time’

part IV|38 pages

Discourse and Class, Networks and Accumulation

part V|34 pages

Transnational Capital and Local Responses

chapter 11|14 pages

Nourishing Networks

Alternative geographies of food

chapter 12|14 pages

Reopening Totalities

Venezuela's restructuring and the globalisation debate

chapter V|5 pages

Commentary On Part V

Theoretical reflections: transnational capital and its alternatives

part VI|32 pages

Nature, Sustainability and the Agrarian Question

chapter 13|8 pages

Sustainability And Theory

An agenda for action

chapter VI|7 pages

Commentary On Part VI

Sustainability and institution building: issues and prospects as seen from New Zealand