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Who decides what is fair in fair trade? The agri-environmental governance of standards, access, and price
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Bacon, Christopher M. (Author)
Title
Who decides what is fair in fair trade? The agri-environmental governance of standards, access, and price
Abstract
The agri-environmental governance of value chains can favour a Polanyian double movement seeking social protection and control over price setting markets or it can advance a neoliberal logic that strives to overcome the few remaining civic and ecologic obstacles to full market dominance. Coupled with a typology that contrasts corporate social responsibility and social economy Fair Trade models, this theoretical framework elucidates positions in the current policy debates about the minimum coffee price standard. Many Southern smallholders consider Fair Trade's standards, which for coffee include direct market accesses for smallholder cooperatives, minimum prices, and environmental criteria, among the best deals available. The smallholder empowerment benefits are often better than competing eco-labels. However, this study finds that Fair Trade minimum prices lost 41 percent of their real value from 1988 to 2008. Despite objections from several ‘market driven’ firms and national labelling initiatives, smallholders' collective advocacy and this research contributed to the Fairtrade Labelling Organisations International's (FLO) decision to mandate a 7–11 percent minimum price increase. The price debates demonstrate that Fair Trade governance is neither purely neoliberal nor social movement led – it is a highly contested socially embedded practice. Voices without votes, North–South inequalities, and dwindling prices paid to its stated protagonists indicate the need for governance reform, cost of living price adjustments, and additional investment in the innovative alternative trade and hybrid models.
Publication
The Journal of Peasant Studies
Volume
37
Issue
1
Pages
111-147
Date
January 1, 2010
Language
English
ISSN
0306-6150
Short Title
Who decides what is fair in fair trade?
Accessed
2017-02-14, 4:50 p.m.
Library Catalog
Taylor and Francis+NEJM
Citation
Bacon, Christopher M. 2010. “Who Decides What Is Fair in Fair Trade? The Agri-Environmental Governance of Standards, Access, and Price.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 37 (1): 111–47. DOI: 10.1080/03066150903498796.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
- double movement
- eco-labels
- environmental and agricultural governance
- environmental science
- environmental studies
- fair trade
- peasant studies
- standards
- sustainability
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