Food has, for most of our species history, been intensely political: who gets to eat what, how often, and through what means? The scale of polity in question has shifted over time, from very local institutions dividing up grain piles to an international community imagined in the Millennium Development Goals of the United Nations. Simultaneously, the numbers and interests of people asserting political stakes in food and agriculture have likewise shifted up and out. Global networks advocate social justice in distal agrarian systems, promotion of some farming techniques and prohibition of others, food sovereignty or efficiencies of markets and trade. Political consumerism allows the well-endowed to "vote with their dollars" for changes in food systems far from home, but depends on certification and labeling from unseen institutions. As an object of governmentality, food has never been so prominent.
The thirty-five handbook chapters confront four major themes in the politics of food: property, technology, justice and knowledge. Ronald Herring's editorial introduction asks how food is political, highlighting contention around the role of market, state and information in societal decisions. The first section of the handbook then examines technology, science and knowledge in food production. What is known - and disputed - about malnutrition, poverty and food security? The second section addresses ethics, rights and distributive justice: agrarian reform, gender inequality, entitlements and subsidies, and the social vision of the alternative food movement. The third section looks to intersections of agriculture and nature: wild foods, livestock, agro-ecological approaches to sustainability, and climate change and genetic engineering. The fourth section addresses food values and culture: political consumerism, labeling and certification, the science and cultural politics of food safety, values driving regulation of genetically modified foods and potential coexistence of GMOs, and organic and conventional crops. The fifth and final section looks at frontiers of global contentions: rival transnational advocacy networks, social movements for organic farming, the who and why of international land grabbing, junctures of cosmopolitan and local food narratives, the "supermarket revolution" and the international agrifood industry in low-income countries, and politics of knowledge in agricultural futures.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: Food, Politics, and Society
- 1. How is Food Political? Market, State, and Knowledge
- Ronald J. Herring
- Part I Production: Technology, Knowledge, and Politics
- 2. Science, Politics, and the Framing of Modern Agricultural Technologies
- John Harriss, Drew Stewart
- 3. Genetically Improved Crops
- Martina Newell-McGloughlin
- 4. Agroecological Intensification of Smallholder Farming
- Rebecca Nelson, Robert Coe
- 5. The Hardest Case: What Blocks Improvements in Agriculture in Africa?
- Robert L. Paarlberg
- 6. The Poor, Malnutrition, Biofortification, and Biotechnology
- Alexander Stein
- 7. Biofuels: Competition for Land, Resources, and Political Subsidies
- David Pimentel, Michael Burgess
- 8. Alternative Paths to Food Security
- Norman Uphoff
- Part II Normative Knowledge: Ethics, Rights, and Distributive Justice
- 9. Ethics of Food Production and Consumption
- Michiel Korthals
- 10. Food, Justice, and Land
- Saturnino M. Borras Jr., Jennifer C. Franco
- 11. Food Security, Productivity, and Gender Inequality
- Bina Agarwal
- 12. Delivering Food Subsidy: The State and the Market
- Ashok Kotwal, Bharat Ramaswami
- 13. Diets, Nutrition, and Poverty: Lessons from India
- Raghav Gaiha, Raghbendra Jha, Vani S. Kulkarni, Nidhi Kaicker
- 14. Food Price and Trade Policy Biases: Inefficient, Inequitable, yet not Inevitable
- Kym Andersen
- 15. Intellectual Property Rights and the Politics of Food
- Krishna Ravi Srinivas
- 16. Is Food the Answer to Malnutrition
- David E. Sahn
- Part III Nature: Food, Agriculture, and the Environment
- 17. Fighting Mother Nature with Biotechnology
- Alan McHughen
- 18. Climate Change and Agriculture: Countering Doomsday Scenarios
- Derrill D. Watson II
- 19. Wild Foods
- Jules Pretty, Zareen Bharucha
- 20. Livestock in the Food Debate
- Purvi Mehta-Bhatt, Paulo Ficarelli
- 21. The Social Vision of the Alternative Food Movement
- Siddhartha Shome
- Part IV Food Values: Ideas, Interests, and Culture
- 22. Food Values Beyond Nutrition
- Ann Grodzins Gold
- 23. Cultural Politics of Food Safety: Genetically Modified Food in Japan, France, and the United States
- Kyoko Sato
- 24. Food Safety
- Bruce Chassy
- 25. The Politics of Food Labeling and Certification
- Emily Clough
- 26. The Politics of Grocery Shopping: Eating, Voting, and (Possibly) Transforming the Food System
- Josée Johnston, Norah MacKendrick
- 27. The Political Economy of Regulation of Biotechnology in Agriculture
- Gregory D. Graff, Gal Hochman, David Zilberman
- 28. Coexistence in the Fields? GM, Organic, and Conventional Food Crops
- Janice Thies
- Part V Global Meets Local: Contestations, Movements, and Expertise
- 29. Global Movements for Food Justice
- M. Jahi Chappell
- 30. The Rise of the Organic Foods Movement as a Transnational Phenomenon
- Tomas Larsson
- 31. Global Meets Local in Food Narratives: The Case of the Thai Papaya
- Sarah Davidson Evanega, Mark Lynas
- 32. Thinking the African Food Crisis: The Sahel Forty Years On
- Michael J. Watts
- 33. Transformation of the Agrifood Industry in Developing Countries
- Thomas Reardon, C. Peter Timmer
- 34. The Twenty-first Century Agricultural Land Rush
- Gregory Thaler
- 35. Agricultural Futures: The Politics of Knowledge
- Ian Scoones
- Index