Food. Jennifer Clapp

Food - Jennifer  Clapp


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with deforestation, climate change, soil exhaustion, and the heavy use of agricultural chemicals.3

      Yet the international economics and politics of food have significant implications for other scales and dimensions of food systems – from access to food for hungry people in specific locations such as a small, remote village in Africa, Latin America, or Asia; to local sustainable food movements in Europe or North America; to diet-related nutrition and health issues more broadly. Taking a step back to the bigger picture, to look at the wider forces that shape the world food economy and how they reinforce one another, helps to build a richer understanding of these other important dimensions of food systems. While there is always a risk of missing the specificity of the dynamics in particular locations or the impact on certain groups when stepping back to take a global perspective, gaining an understanding of the big picture helps to contextualize the local. Indeed, diverse local level food initiatives that seek to provide alternatives may be difficult to scale up and out precisely because the world food economy creates conditions that push against those efforts. In other words, both place-based local studies and global overviews of broader structural dynamics are needed to gain a comprehensive picture. This book aims to contribute to a deeper understanding of the global political and economic dimensions of food, with the hope that it will complement studies that are grounded in more local case studies or which are more focused on specific issues or groups.

      The world food economy today is characterized by growing distance, as powerful actors in its middle spaces increasingly treat food like any other commodity, where its profit generating abilities are prioritized over its other essential functions such as nourishment, livelihood, and culture. It is also characterized by asymmetry and volatility, and as a result is susceptible to crises where the world’s poorest and most marginalized people are typically affected the most. Finally, it is also characterized by increasing ecological fragility, putting at risk the very foundation on which food and agriculture is based. These features of the world food economy have not gone unnoticed. Resistance movements that seek to promote alternatives to the current world food economy are on the rise. Although still small in scale compared to the global trend in world food markets, these movements signal a momentous shift in thinking on a broad scale about the implications of the food we eat every day.

      Throughout history, world food markets have had an international dimension to them. Salt, sugar, and spices have been traded over long distances for centuries. Colonial powers invested in plantation agriculture for certain key crops – such as sugar, coffee, tea, and tropical fruits – in their colonies, and established international trade routes for food and agriculture items in the 1800s – mainly as imports to wealthy nations. In some cases, such as the United Kingdom (as is discussed in more depth in Chapter 2), the import of food items from the colonies provided an important source of its calories, particularly as the country industrialized and needed to feed an expanding urban population with affordable grains and other foodstuffs.

      The total volume and value of agrifood trade has increased dramatically in the past thirty years. Agricultural


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