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ID134640
Title ProperFair trade slippages and Vietnam gaps
Other Title Informationthe ideological fantasies of fair trade coffee
LanguageENG
AuthorFridell, Gavin
Summary / Abstract (Note)Fair trade coffee sales have boomed since the late 1980s, making it one of the most recognised forms of ‘ethical consumerism’ in the world. Around the same time exports of lower quality coffee beans from Vietnam also boomed, launching Vietnam from an insignificant coffee exporter to the world’s second largest with historically unprecedented speed. These disparate projects have had significant impacts on thousands of farmers – with Vietnam’s new class of coffee producers representing three and a half times the number of coffee families certified by fair trade. Northern actors, however, have given far more public and positive attention to fair trade. This article will argue that this difference does not stem from a strictly objective appraisal of the relative merits and shortcomings of each project, but from the compatibility of fair trade with ‘free trade’ and its emotionally charged ideological fantasies. This includes unconscious beliefs and desires around individualism, voluntarism, democracy and the affirmation of the exaggerated power of Northern consumers – as opposed to the Southern agency and complicated collective action implied by Vietnamese coffee statecraft.
`In' analytical NoteThird World Quarterly Vol.35, No.7; 2014: p.1179-1194
Journal SourceThird World Quarterly Vol: 35 No 7
Standard NumberModern Statecraft


 
 
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