Literature DB >> 20873026

Agrofuels capitalism: a view from political economy.

Ben White1, Anirban Dasgupta.   

Abstract

This article considers the global expansion of agrofuels feedstock production from a political economy perspective. It considers and dismisses the environmental and pro-poor developmental justifications attached to agrofuels. To local populations and direct producers, the specific destination of the crop as fuel, food, cosmetics or other final uses in faraway places is probably of less interest than the forms of (direct or indirect) appropriation of their land and the forms of their insertion or exclusion as producers in global commodity chains. Global demand for both agrofuels and food is stimulating new forms (or the resurgence of old forms) of corporate land grabbing and expropriation, and of incorporation of smallholders in contracted production. Drawing both on recent studies on agrofuels expansion and on the political economy literature on agrarian transition and capitalism in agriculture, this article raises the question whether "agrofuels capitalism" is in any way essentially different from other forms of capitalist agrarian monocrop production, and in turn whether the agrarian transitions involved require new tools of analysis.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20873026     DOI: 10.1080/03066150.2010.512449

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Peasant Stud        ISSN: 0306-6150


  1 in total

1.  Once the rockets are up, who should care where they come down? The problem of responsibility ascription for the negative consequences of biofuel innovations.

Authors:  T H Tempels; H Van den Belt
Journal:  Springerplus       Date:  2016-03-04
  1 in total

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