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Agribusiness and Society

Agribusiness and Society

Kees Jansen | Sietze Vellema

(2008)

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Book Details

Abstract

This volume examines how far agribusiness corporations are responding to the opportunities and pressures resulting from emerging environmental awareness. In particular, in what ways are they changing their R & D and business practices in order to develop new environmentally oriented products, services and methods of production? And what can they change of their own volition, and where is external direction a necessary condition of environmentally friendly innovation? These questions are explored through investigations of particular biotech and agribusiness companies -- including Monsanto, Ciba Geigy, Dole, and Chiquita -- and their behavior in situations as diverse as California, Europe, Australia, Brazil, and Central America. The volume explores how some have responded to environmental pressures by exploiting new consumer-created markets; some changed their production practices in a sustainable way; while others have complied with (or resisted) state environmental regulation, notably labelling systems and certification. Each study explores how institutional, cultural, economic, political and technological contexts shape the strategies of big business. Topics include 'green bananas', genetically modified tomatoes and soy, the new markets in organic produce, health and pesticides, and access to justice. The book explains why some corporations are successful in introducing environmentally friendly innovations, and others are not. The key to understanding contrasting outcomes is examining the interaction between internal corporate environments where profit and efficiency considerations predominate, and external environments where consumer preferences, NGO pressures and government regulation are important. The book also explores possible new roles for the public sector. The result is a sophisticated and critical analysis of business practices and regulatory systems in the agro-food sector.
'A milestone in the analysis of how we should consider corporate engagement with the environment.' Bill Pritchard, University of Sydney 'Provides an eye opener and food for thought for local businesses.' Bhupinder Singh, Malaysian Business 'A good read for the Malaysian palm oil sector.' Malaysian Business
Kees Jansen is Lecturer in the Technology and Agrarian Development Group, Wageningen University, Netherlands. Sietze Vellema is Scientific Researcher in Technology Management and Policy in the Institute for Agro-Technical Research at Wageningen University and Research Centre.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Bookmark Cover
Contents v
Tables and figures viii
ONE | Agribusiness and environmentalism: the politics of technology innovation and regulation 1
Agribusiness strategies and environmentalism 6
The politics of technology innovation 9
Regulation after the sustainability decade 12
Notes 19
References 20
PART I: Agribusiness’s Responses to Environ-mentalism in the Market 23
TWO | Reconciling shareholders, stakeholders and managers: experiencing the Ciba-Geigy vision 25
Ciba-Geigy 25
Vision 2000 - the triple bottom line 26
The Farmer Support Team 27
Sustaining the Farmer Support Team in a period of rapid change 31
Vision 2000 in the year 2002 32
Vision 2000 in hindsight 33
Visions for sustainable development and the biotechnology experience 35
Vision 2000 and sustainable agriculture 37
The Farmer Support Team in context 38
Notes 39
References 40
THREE | Monsanto facing uncertain futures 42
Running into controversy: the problem of technological immobility 45
The bottom line: investors’ appreciation of an indebted company 52
Confrontation with the public domain: technology in an ideological battle 55
Conclusions 61
Notes 63
References 64
FOUR | The appearance and disappearance of the GM tomato 68
The splitting of the GM tomato 71
Flavr does not Savr Calgene from death or Monsanto 74
The Zeneca strategy 79
The clash of configurations and the de-institution of the UK market for GM foods 83
Conclusion 87
Notes 88
References 89
FIVE | Contrasting paths of corporate greening in Antipodean agriculture 91
Greening agriculture and food in Australia and New Zealand 92
Corporate capital and greening 95
The entry of corporate capital into organic agriculture 97
Constructing ‘organics’: food products and corporate identity 99
The retail sector and greening 103
First and second phase greening 106
Conclusion 109
References 110
SIX | Room for manoeuvre? (In)organic agribusiness in California 114
Is agribusiness inorganic? 116
Defining agribusiness 121
Agribusiness takeover? 124
Agribusiness influence 130
The value of land in the land of value 134
Conclusion 137
Notes 138
References 139
PART II: Regulating Corporate Agribusiness: New Roles for the Public Sector 143
SEVEN | Greening bananas and institutionalizing environmentalism 145
Images and international markets 146
Honduran pressure to improve environmental performance 148
Two environmental certificates 150
The scope for changing pesticide use 153
Forms of self-regulation 159
Green bananas and the limitations of self-regulation 165
Conclusion 168
Notes 169
References 172
EIGHT | The DBCP pesticide cases: seeking access to justice to make agribusiness accountable 176
The rise and fall of DBCP 177
Banana workers from the developing South seek justice: DBCP litigation in the USA 180
Avoiding liability with a subverted forum non conveniens doctrine 184
Corporate defendants seek an FNC dismissal 187
Latin America takes a stand 188
A globalized economy requires globalized access to justice 192
Notes 194
References 198
NINE | Business and biotechnology: regulation of GM crops and the politics of influence 200
Regulation for business 201
NGOs and civil regulation 220
Conclusion 225
Notes 227
References 227
TEN | Social struggles and the regulation of transgenic crops in Brazil 232
Monsanto and the making of regulatory frameworks 233
Conditions for the introduction of transgenic crops in Brazil 236
Alternative perspectives on development and technology 239
The development of the controversies 244
Conclusion 252
Notes 254
References 256
ELEVEN | Private versus public? Agenda-setting in international agro-technologies 261
Technology as will and idea 262
The Green Revolution: international agro-technology and the Cold War 265
The gene revolution: international agro-technology and the market 270
Food as a right: international agro-technology in an era of ‘failed states’ 276
Conclusion: agro-technological multiculturalism 282
Notes 284
References 285
Notes on contributors 289
Index 293