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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Back to nature: Changing 'worlds of production' in the food sector

Jonathan Murdoch, +1 more
- 01 Oct 1999 - 
- Vol. 39, Iss: 4, pp 465-483
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TLDR
In this article, the authors combine understandings of the conventional food sector with analysis of alternative circuits so that they can show how different worlds of production come together in the sphere of food production.
Abstract
Analysis of the contemporary food system has shown a progressive displacement of ‘natural’ processes in favour of those characterized as ‘industrial.’ Thus, an instrumentalized form of nature has come to prevail within the food sector. And yet, the contemporary literature on the processes of globalization and standardization in the food system has underestimated the reassertion of more ‘natural’ products in alternative food circuits. In this paper we seek to combine understandings of the conventional food sector with analysis of alternative circuits so that we can show how different ‘worlds of production’ come together in the sphere of food production. Utilizing two case studies from Italy, we indicate that the main trajectory of development in the food sector is not towards globalized and standardized production but is towards a fragmentation of production processes in which different trends can be seen to co-exist. The status of ‘nature’ differs according to the particular productive world that dominates. However, we indicate that a growing concern for the natural component of food is driving some of the most significant changes currently running through the food sector.

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Should we go “home” to eat?: toward a reflexive politics of localism

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that rather than declaiming the "radical particularism" of localism, it is more productive to question an "unreflexive localism" and to forge localist alliances that pay attention to equality and social justice.
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Quality, Nature, and Embeddedness: Some Theoretical Considerations in the Context of the Food Sector

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that quality in the food sector is closely linked to nature and the local embeddedness of supply chains and discuss the most appropriate theoretical approaches for the analysis of quality in food production and consumption.
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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.
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Networks — a new paradigm of rural development?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that rural development strategies must take heed of network forms in both domains and that rural policy should be recast in network terms, and propose two main bundles of networks: vertical and horizontal networks.
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Beyond the divide: rethinking relationships between alternative and conventional food networks in Europe

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue for a much morenuanced and complex understanding of the relationships between conventional and alternative food chains and their implications for rural development, and highlight the need to explore the competitive relationships that alternative food networks have with the conventional sector to expose power imbalance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Quality, Nature, and Embeddedness: Some Theoretical Considerations in the Context of the Food Sector

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that quality in the food sector is closely linked to nature and the local embeddedness of supply chains and discuss the most appropriate theoretical approaches for the analysis of quality in food production and consumption.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Regional World

Journal ArticleDOI

From Farm to Table: The Organic Vegetable Commodity Chain of Northern California

TL;DR: In this article, the AA. montrent que le capital agro-alimentaire is en train de penetrer le segment de plus forte plus-value de la chaine de production des legumes biologiques, malgre l'existence of pratiques et d'idees allant a contrecourant du secteur conventionnel de production.
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