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x | |
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xii | |
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xiii | |
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xiv | |
Insights |
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xv | |
Acknowledgments |
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xvi | |
Preface |
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xvii | |
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1 Introducing Geographies of Food |
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3 | (19) |
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3 | (1) |
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1.2 What are food geographies? |
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4 | (12) |
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1.3 Geographical imaginations and food's geographies |
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16 | (2) |
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1.4 Structure of the book |
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18 | (4) |
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2 Food and Place Identity |
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22 | (27) |
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22 | (2) |
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2.2 Making food and making places: landscapes, nations, and labor |
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24 | (7) |
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2.3 Moving food and making places: placing and displacing |
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31 | (14) |
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45 | (1) |
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45 | (4) |
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Part 2 Geographies of Food Production, Transformation, and Consumption |
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3 Geographies and Politics of Agricultural Production |
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49 | (40) |
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49 | (2) |
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3.2 Geographies of food production: a global perspective |
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51 | (8) |
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3.3 Agri-food commodity chains: product sector geographies |
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59 | (10) |
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3.4 Producing food in the city: urban agriculture |
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69 | (11) |
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3.5 Agricultural policy: political geographies of food production |
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80 | (7) |
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87 | (1) |
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87 | (2) |
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4 What Happens to Food? Geographies of Mobility and Transformation |
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89 | (31) |
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89 | (2) |
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4.2 Mobility and transformations: geographies and relationships |
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91 | (3) |
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4.3 Transforming agriculture and food under capitalism: the agrarian question |
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94 | (1) |
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4.4 Liberalizing food mobility: global trade policy and global food regimes |
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95 | (3) |
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4.5 Government intervention, global food governance, and free trade |
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98 | (4) |
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4.6 Global food trading: mobilizing High Value Foods (HVFs) |
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102 | (3) |
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4.7 "Big Food": transforming and industrializing food |
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105 | (5) |
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4.8 Working in farming and food processing: the human cost |
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110 | (4) |
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4.9 Wasting food in industrialized food systems |
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114 | (4) |
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118 | (1) |
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118 | (2) |
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5 Eating Geographies: The Spaces and Cultures of Food Consumption |
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120 | (29) |
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5.1 Introducing the geographies of eating |
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120 | (1) |
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5.2 The shifting geographies of food consumption |
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121 | (6) |
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5.3 Food's cultural geographies: eating space(s), places, and connections |
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127 | (12) |
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5.4 Eating geographical politics and ethics |
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139 | (6) |
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5.5 Summary: eating space, place, and scale |
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145 | (1) |
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145 | (4) |
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Part 3 Geographies of Food Crisis and Response |
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6 Food Systems in Crisis? The New Food Insecurity |
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149 | (22) |
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149 | (2) |
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6.2 The contours of the world food crisis |
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151 | (4) |
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6.3 The new food security debate |
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155 | (2) |
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6.4 Explaining the 2007-8 food price crisis: the new fundamentals |
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157 | (4) |
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6.5 Financial speculation and the food crisis |
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161 | (5) |
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6.6 Other critical interpretations of the food crisis and food insecurity |
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166 | (3) |
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169 | (1) |
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169 | (2) |
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7 The Fight against Hunger and Malnutrition in the Majority World |
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171 | (30) |
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171 | (1) |
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7.2 The scale and geography of hunger and malnutrition in the Majority World |
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172 | (4) |
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7.3 Causes of hunger and malnutrition in the Majority World: poverty, conflict, and structural inequality |
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176 | (10) |
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7.4 The international response to hunger and malnutrition: from Green Revolution to the Sustainable Development Goals |
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186 | (10) |
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7.5 From corporate power to people power: the rise of the "food sovereignty" movement |
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196 | (2) |
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198 | (1) |
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199 | (2) |
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8 Food Insecurity amidst Wealth |
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201 | (28) |
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201 | (1) |
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8.2 Food insecurity in the twenty-first century: scale, causes, and consequences |
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202 | (14) |
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8.3 Solutions to food insecurity: food aid, the right to food, or food justice? |
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216 | (11) |
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227 | (1) |
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228 | (1) |
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9 Reconnecting Consumers, Producers, and Food |
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229 | (32) |
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229 | (1) |
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9.2 AFNs: definition and geography |
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230 | (6) |
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9.3 "First generation" AFNs: locality foods and local food networks |
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236 | (8) |
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9.4 Fair trade networks: the moral economy of getting to know your coffee farmer |
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244 | (5) |
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9.5 "Second generation" AFNs and sustainability transitions |
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249 | (7) |
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256 | (1) |
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257 | (4) |
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Part 4 Geographies of Possible Food Futures |
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10 Future Scenarios for Sustainable Food and Farming |
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261 | (34) |
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261 | (3) |
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10.2 Towards sustainable food systems |
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264 | (1) |
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10.3 Beyond productivist agriculture and "big food": competing emergent paradigms and "food wars" |
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265 | (3) |
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10.4 Technocentric approaches: sustainability through science? |
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268 | (9) |
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10.5 Ecocentric approaches: sustainability through agroecology? |
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277 | (5) |
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10.6 Sustainable diets and a decentralized food politics |
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282 | (11) |
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293 | (1) |
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294 | (1) |
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295 | (14) |
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295 | (2) |
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11.2 Aftertaste---key themes revisited |
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297 | (8) |
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11.3 Changing the food system: putting ourselves in the mix |
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305 | (2) |
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11.4 Last bites for food citizens |
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307 | (2) |
Bibliography |
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309 | (28) |
Index |
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337 | |