ABSTRACT

This book explores the shifting relations of food provisioning in Turkey from a comparative global political economy perspective. It offers in-depth ethnographic analysis, interviews and historical insights into the ambiguities and diversities that simultaneously affect the changing conditions of food and agriculture in Turkey. Specific issues examined include the commodification of land, food and labour; the expansion and deepening of industrial standardization; the expansion of a supermarket model; and concomitant changes in, as well as the simultaneous co-existence of, traditional methods of production and marketing. Contrasting observations are drawn from diverse locales to provide examples of convergence, divergence and cohabitation in relation to transnationally advocated industrial models.

Commodification of Global Agrifood Systems and Agro-Ecology employs a form of comparative perspective that allows the particular processes of restructuring of agrifood relations in Turkey to be simultaneously distinguished from, yet related to, changes taking place in global power dynamics. Yıldız Atasoy explores agrifood transformation in Turkey with a unique approach that considers a plurality of intertwined normative influences, ontological beliefs, cultural–religious narratives, political struggles and critical–interpretive positions. Based on original research, the book treats changes in food provisioning as an analytical thread capable of uncovering how the normative acceptability of capitalized agriculture and techno-scientific innovation is entangled with processes of class formation, growing inter-capitalist competition and Islamic politics. Such processes, in turn, frame income/wealth generation, landscape management, agro-ecological dynamics and labour practices, as well as the taste and smell of place.

chapter 1|35 pages

Agrifood Systems and Supermarketization

chapter 2|25 pages

Breaking from the Past

Changes in Agricultural Land Use

chapter 3|32 pages

GlobalGAP and Agro-Biotechnology

Syngenta and Rijk Zwaan in Turkish Villages

chapter 4|38 pages

Farming Imaginaries

Convergence, Divergence and Beyond

chapter 5|38 pages

The Taste and Smell of Place

chapter 6|42 pages

Trust and Trustworthiness

Paternalist Labour Relations in Agriculture

chapter 7|35 pages

Supermarkets and Pazars

Divergent Paths

chapter 8|14 pages

A Discussion on Diversity