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Stefano Ponte

Researcher at Copenhagen Business School

Publications -  141
Citations -  10375

Stefano Ponte is an academic researcher from Copenhagen Business School. The author has contributed to research in topics: Global value chain & Sustainability. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 134 publications receiving 9157 citations. Previous affiliations of Stefano Ponte include University of Copenhagen & Danish Institute for International Studies.

Papers
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Quality standards, conventions and the governance of global value chains

TL;DR: In this paper, it is argued that global value chains are becoming increasingly "buyer-driven" even though they are characterized by "hands-off" forms of co-ordination between "lead firms" and their immediate suppliers.
Journal ArticleDOI

The 'Latte Revolution'? Regulation, Markets and Consumption in the Global Coffee Chain

Stefano Ponte
- 01 Jul 2002 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine how these transformations affect developing countries and what policy instruments are available to address the emerging imbalances in the coffee supply chain, through the lenses of global commodity chain analysis, and find that a relatively stable institutional environment where proportions of generated income were fairly distributed between producing and consuming countries turned into one that is more informal, unstable and unequal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Governing global value chains: an introduction

TL;DR: A review of the three main interpretations of GVC governance that have been advanced: governance as driving, governance as coordination, and governance as normalization can be found in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global Commodity Chain Analysis and the French Filière Approach: Comparison and Critique

TL;DR: The authors reviewed two approaches to the study of economic restructuring which focus on commodity-specific dynamics of change and found that the global commodity chain approach has a more coherent framework than the filiere approach, although it is still far from constituting a fully fledged 'theory'.
Book

Trading Down: Africa, Value Chains And The Global Economy

TL;DR: The Age of Global Capitalism as mentioned in this paper, the New International Trade Regime, and the Global Value Chain Analysis 4. The ride of Buyer-driven Value Chains in Africa 5. Entry Barriers, Marginalisation and Upgrading 6. Standards, Quality Conventions and the Governance of Global Value Chains 7. TradingDown?