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1. Global Commodity Chains: Genealogy and Review
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Jennifer Bair
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- The Authors ix
- 1. Global Commodity Chains: Genealogy and Review 1
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Part I. Operationalizing Global Chains: Theoretical and Methodological Debates
- 2. Historicizing Commodity Chains: Five Hundred Years of the Global Coffee Commodity Chain 37
- 3. Trading Up the Commodity Chain? The Impact of Extractive and Labor-Intensive Manufacturing Trade on World-System Inequalities 63
- 4. Protection Networks and Commodity Chains in the Capitalist World-Economy 83
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Part II. Getting at Governance: Power and Coordination in Global Chains
- 5. The Comparative Advantages of Tropical Commodity Chain Analysis 93
- 6. From Commodity Chains to Value Chains. Interdisciplinary Theory Building in an Age of Globalization 110
- 7. Global Commodity Chains, Market Makers, and the Rise of Demand-Responsive Economies 136
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Part III. Workers and Activists in Global Chains
- 8. Mimicking “Lean” in Global Value Chains: It’s the Workers Who Get Leaned on 165
- 9. Unveiling the Unveiling: Commodity Chains, Commodity Fetishism, and the “Value” of Voluntary, Ethical Food Labels 190
- 10. Chain (Re)actions: Comparing Activist Mobilization Against Biotechnology in Britain and the United States 207
- Notes 231
- References 239
- Index 269
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- The Authors ix
- 1. Global Commodity Chains: Genealogy and Review 1
-
Part I. Operationalizing Global Chains: Theoretical and Methodological Debates
- 2. Historicizing Commodity Chains: Five Hundred Years of the Global Coffee Commodity Chain 37
- 3. Trading Up the Commodity Chain? The Impact of Extractive and Labor-Intensive Manufacturing Trade on World-System Inequalities 63
- 4. Protection Networks and Commodity Chains in the Capitalist World-Economy 83
-
Part II. Getting at Governance: Power and Coordination in Global Chains
- 5. The Comparative Advantages of Tropical Commodity Chain Analysis 93
- 6. From Commodity Chains to Value Chains. Interdisciplinary Theory Building in an Age of Globalization 110
- 7. Global Commodity Chains, Market Makers, and the Rise of Demand-Responsive Economies 136
-
Part III. Workers and Activists in Global Chains
- 8. Mimicking “Lean” in Global Value Chains: It’s the Workers Who Get Leaned on 165
- 9. Unveiling the Unveiling: Commodity Chains, Commodity Fetishism, and the “Value” of Voluntary, Ethical Food Labels 190
- 10. Chain (Re)actions: Comparing Activist Mobilization Against Biotechnology in Britain and the United States 207
- Notes 231
- References 239
- Index 269