Corporate Power in Global Agrifood Governance

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In today's globally integrated food system, events in one part of the world can have multiple and wide-ranging effects, as has been shown by the recent and rapid global rise in food prices. Transnational corporations (TNCs) have been central to the development of this global food system, dominating production, international trade, processing, distribution, and retail sectors. Moreover, these global corporations play a key role in the establishment of rules and regulations by which they themselves are governed. This book examines how TNCs exercise power over global food and agriculture governance and what the consequences are for the sustainability of the global food system. The book defines three aspects of this corporate power: instrumental power, or direct influence; structural power, or the broader influence corporations have over setting agendas and rules; and discursive, or communicative and persuasive, power. The book begins by examining the nature of corporate power in cases ranging from "green" food certification in Southeast Asia and corporate influence on U.S. food aid policy to governance in the seed industry and international food safety standards. Chapters examine such issues as promotion of corporate-defined "environmental sustainability" and "food security," biotechnology firms and intellectual property rights, and consumer resistance to genetically modified organisms (GMOs) and other cases of contestation in agrobiology. In a final chapter, the editors raise the crucial question of how to achieve participation, transparency, and accountability in food governance. Contributors : Maarten Arentsen, Jennifer Clapp, Robert Falkner, Doris Fuchs, Agni Kalfagianni, Peter Newell, Steffanie Scott, Susan Sell, Elizabeth Smythe, Peter Vandergeest, Marc Williams, Mary Young Food, Health, and the Environment series

Author(s): Jennifer Clapp, Doris Fuchs
Series: Food, Health, and the Environment
Edition: 1
Publisher: The MIT Press
Year: 2009

Language: English
Pages: 329

Contents......Page 6
Series Foreword......Page 8
Contributors......Page 12
List of Acronyms......Page 16
1 Agrifood Corporations, Global Governance, and Sustainability......Page 22
I Corporate Power in International Retail and Trade Governance......Page 48
2 Retail Power, Private Standards, and Sustainability in the Global Food System......Page 50
3 Certification Standards and the Governance of Green Foods in Southeast Asia......Page 82
4 In Whose Interests?......Page 114
5 Corporate Interests in US Food Aid Policy......Page 146
II Corporations and Governance of Genetically Modified Organisms......Page 174
6 Feeding the World?......Page 176
7 Corporations, Seeds, and Intellectual Property Rights Governance......Page 208
8 The Troubled Birth of the “Biotech Century”......Page 246
9 Technology, Food, Power......Page 274
10 Corporate Power and Global Agrifood Governance......Page 306
Index......Page 318