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In addition to constituting an evolving area of inquiry within the
social sciences, agricultural certification, and particularly its
Fair Trade and organic components, has emerged as a significant
tool for promoting rural development in the global South. This book
is unique for two reasons. First, in contrast to existing studies
that have tended to examine Fair Trade and organic certification as
independent systems, the studies presented in this book reveal
their joint application within actual production settings,
demonstrating the greater complexity entailed in these double
certification systems through the generation of contradictions and
tensions compared with single certification systems. Second, the
authors, who are both Asian, reveal the realities of applying Fair
Trade and organic certification systems within Asian agriculture.
In doing so, they challenge the fact that most Fair Trade studies
have been undertaken by Western scholars who have tended to focus
on Latin American and African producers. Drawing on a wealth of
grounded case studies conducted in India, Thailand, and the
Philippines, this pioneering study on double certification makes a
significant contribution to studies on Fair Trade and organic
agriculture beyond Asia.
In addition to constituting an evolving area of inquiry within the
social sciences, agricultural certification, and particularly its
Fair Trade and organic components, has emerged as a significant
tool for promoting rural development in the global South. This book
is unique for two reasons. First, in contrast to existing studies
that have tended to examine Fair Trade and organic certification as
independent systems, the studies presented in this book reveal
their joint application within actual production settings,
demonstrating the greater complexity entailed in these double
certification systems through the generation of contradictions and
tensions compared with single certification systems. Second, the
authors, who are both Asian, reveal the realities of applying Fair
Trade and organic certification systems within Asian agriculture.
In doing so, they challenge the fact that most Fair Trade studies
have been undertaken by Western scholars who have tended to focus
on Latin American and African producers. Drawing on a wealth of
grounded case studies conducted in India, Thailand, and the
Philippines, this pioneering study on double certification makes a
significant contribution to studies on Fair Trade and organic
agriculture beyond Asia.
Rethinking African Agriculture argues that rural communities in
Africa are still shaped by non-agrarian factors both in livelihood
strategy and social formation. This volume renews and deepens the
research on the African peasantry by offering a fresh perspective
drawn from the hitherto largely unknown Japanese research on the
subject. The ethnographic fieldwork focuses not only on the micro
environment of the producers but also the broader historical
context in which they live and work. The contributors argue that,
in comparison with other regions of the world, Africa has never
passed through an agrarian revolution that would effectively change
the mode of production from within. Modernization efforts from the
outside have fallen far short of the ambition to transform
agriculture in Africa. Rural Africa is still largely a natural
society characterized by "non-agrarian" features as evident in
people's livelihood, social organization, and farming systems. This
book will be of interest to social scientists and anthropologists
focusing on African development, agriculture and agrarian
societies,
Rethinking African Agriculture argues that rural communities in
Africa are still shaped by non-agrarian factors both in livelihood
strategy and social formation. This volume renews and deepens the
research on the African peasantry by offering a fresh perspective
drawn from the hitherto largely unknown Japanese research on the
subject. The ethnographic fieldwork focuses not only on the micro
environment of the producers but also the broader historical
context in which they live and work. The contributors argue that,
in comparison with other regions of the world, Africa has never
passed through an agrarian revolution that would effectively change
the mode of production from within. Modernization efforts from the
outside have fallen far short of the ambition to transform
agriculture in Africa. Rural Africa is still largely a natural
society characterized by "non-agrarian" features as evident in
people’s livelihood, social organization, and farming systems.
This book will be of interest to social scientists and
anthropologists focusing on African development, agriculture and
agrarian societies,
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