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Journal ArticleDOI

Contesting Ethical Trade in Colombia's Cut-Flower Industry:A Case of Cultural and Economic Injustice

Caroline Wright, +1 more
- 01 Jul 2007 - 
- Vol. 1, Iss: 2, pp 255-275
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TLDR
In this paper, a case study of Colombia's cut-flower industry is used to explore the mutual entwinement of culture and economy, and examine responses by cut-flour employers and their representatives to ethical trade discourses demanding economic justice for Colombia's largely female cutflower workers.
Abstract
Based on a case study of Colombia’s cut-flower industry, this article draws strategically on Nancy Fraser’s model of (in)justice to explore the mutual entwinement of culture and economy. It examines responses by cut-flower employers and their representatives to ethical trade discourses demanding economic justice for Colombia’s largely female cut-flower workers. It argues that employers’ misrecognition of both ethical trade campaigners and cut-flower workers may serve to deny and redefine claims of maldistribution.Through a ‘home-grown’ code of conduct, employers also seek to appropriate ethical trade in their own interests. Finally, a gender coding of worker misrecognition ostensibly displaces workers’ problems from the economic realm to the cultural, offering the ‘modernity’ of full capitalist relations as the solution. In further examining the ‘responses to the responses’ by workers and their advocates, the contestation of ethical trade is highlighted and its prospects assessed.

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Journal ArticleDOI

International and Comparative Industrial Relations@@@Corporate Responsibility and Labour Rights: Codes of Conduct in the Global Economy

TL;DR: In this paper, Howitt et al. discuss the political economy of Codes of Conduct and the role of ILO labour standards in the development and implementation of codes in the textile industry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ethical selving in cultural contexts: fairtrade consumption as an everyday ethical practice in the UK and Germany

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify the framing role of global consumer culture and an implicit ethics of equitability inscribed in capitalist practices of exchange and specify how these play out differently in Germany and the UK.
MonographDOI

Climate Change and Gender Justice

TL;DR: The Working in Gender & Development series bring together themed selections of the best articles from the Oxfam journal Gender and Development, supplemented with specially commissioned articles and material drawn from other Oxfam publications as mentioned in this paper.
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Gender, water, and climate change in Sonora, Mexico: implications for policies and programmes on agricultural income-generation

TL;DR: This article focuses on the sustainability of gendered agricultural income-generating activities in Sonora, near the Mexico–USA border, in the context of climate change, and makes recommendations for development policies and programmes.
References
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BookDOI

The order of things : an archaeology of the human sciences

TL;DR: The Prose of the World: I The Four Similitudes, II Signatures, III The Limits of the world, IV the Writing of Things, V The Being of Language 3.Representing: I Don Quixote, II Order, III Representation of the Sign, IV Duplicated Representation, V Imagination of Resemblance, VI Mathesis and 'Taxinoma' 4. Speaking: I Criticism and Commentary, II General Grammar,III The Theory of the Verb, IV Articulation, V Designation, VI Derivation,
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The Savage Mind

TL;DR: The Savage Mind as mentioned in this paper is the most comprehensive and profound book written by Levi-Strauss, and it is a most exciting intellectual exercise in which dialectic, wit, and imagination combine to stimulate and provoke at every page.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Savage Mind.

TL;DR: The Savage Mind by Levi-Strauss as discussed by the authors is one of the most popular books in the history of ideas, and it is a most stimulating, informative and suggestive intellectual challenge.
Book

Justice Interruptus: Critical Reflections on the "Postsocialist" Condition

Nancy Fraser
TL;DR: In this paper, Fraser argues for an integrative approach that encompasses the best aspects of both the politics of recognition and redistribution, and argues that the key is to overcome the false oppositions of "postsocialist" commonsense.
Book

Redistribution or Recognition?: A Political-Philosophical Exchange

TL;DR: In this article, Fraser and Honneth set out to advance the discussion in political philosophy regarding the increasingly polarized political positions of redistribution or recognition, or more simply, class politics versus identity politics.
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