2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.geoforum.2015.05.005
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Food and nutrition security policies in the Caribbean: Challenging the corporate food regime?

Abstract: Trinidad and Tobago is contributing to climate change by maintaining a model for food security that is based on corporate controls over food and agriculture. With policy documents, media sources, and ethnographic data, I argue that Trinidad and Tobago's food system is connected to national and transnational markets that firmly affix the country's food system to the fossil fuel economy. Three examples are provided. The first is the adoption of the World Bank's 'value chain' model for agriculture, which favours … Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…At the global scale, it demonstrates how actors can be exposed to cascades of climate-related risks, with limited capacity to rapidly adapt to them (Challinor et al, 2018;Helbing, 2013). At the regional level, this reflects the Caribbean's long-term dependency on global markets for imports of primary commodities (either raw or semiprocessed), like feed corn (Wilson, 2016;Beckford & Campbell, 2013).…”
Section: Comm 2016)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the global scale, it demonstrates how actors can be exposed to cascades of climate-related risks, with limited capacity to rapidly adapt to them (Challinor et al, 2018;Helbing, 2013). At the regional level, this reflects the Caribbean's long-term dependency on global markets for imports of primary commodities (either raw or semiprocessed), like feed corn (Wilson, 2016;Beckford & Campbell, 2013).…”
Section: Comm 2016)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cuba and Haiti are, however, highly distinctive in terms of their size, their Spanish and French colonial histories, and the character of their peasantries, and therefore, do not carry obvious lessons for the experience of the considerably smaller Angloislands. In this regard, Weis (2004) and Wilson (2016), on Jamaica and T&T respectively, suggest food and agricultural reforms based on neoliberal logics have done little to help the poor farmer or the environment. Less attention, though, is focused on the broader functioning of food sovereignty across the independent Anglo-Caribbean, a gap that this paper addresses.…”
Section: Sovereignty and Food Sovereignty In The Independent Anglo-camentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They argue that this view is being contested amid mounting concerns about social, health and environmental pressures on food supply. These concerns include the heavy dependence of industrial agriculture on fossil fuels and how this dependence contributes to climate change (Wilson, 2016). Thus new and more complex policy analysis is needed (Lang and Barling, 2012).…”
Section: Retroliberal Market-centric Approaches To Food Securitymentioning
confidence: 99%