2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.geoforum.2019.02.028
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Still searching for (food) sovereignty: Why are radical discourses only partially mobilised in the independent Anglo-Caribbean?

Abstract: The notion of 'food sovereignty' is often surprisingly absent in food and agricultural discourses in the Anglo-Caribbean, where over the past half century policy-making has aligned with conventional 'food security' approaches. This paper argues that, in addition to its contemporary entrenchment within a neoliberal environment, this is also due to the nature of 'sovereignty' itself in a region which has been shaped by a distinctive colonial, social and economic history. In order to demonstrate this, firstly, it… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Food sovereignty has also been proposed as a critical response. In 2007, a group of delegates from several local farmer organizations submitted an Agricultural Manifesto to CARICOM (Thompson 2019 ). The Manifesto was based on food sovereignty principles, urging “bottom–up solutions” and “participation” over “consultation” (ibid).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Food sovereignty has also been proposed as a critical response. In 2007, a group of delegates from several local farmer organizations submitted an Agricultural Manifesto to CARICOM (Thompson 2019 ). The Manifesto was based on food sovereignty principles, urging “bottom–up solutions” and “participation” over “consultation” (ibid).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since the start of the embargo of Qatar in 2017, securitized discourses about food have made a resurgence across the Arabian Peninsula. Intertwined with globally hegemonic tropes and imaginaries of state-based nationalism, food security narratives are pervaded by the themes of in/dependence, territorial sovereignty, national vulnerability, and the precarious integrity of food supply chains, which might become a site of attack in political confrontations (Barnes, 2009; Boland, 2000; Conversi, 2016; Duminy, 2018; Gross and Feldman, 2015; Hopma and Woods, 2014; Nally, 2015; Thompson, 2019; Wegren et al, 2018; Wengle, 2016; Woertz, 2019). Yet as international as these securitized imaginaries of food as a ‘weapon’ are, they also have a specifically regional history in the Gulf.…”
Section: Securitized Food Discourses and Gulf Geopoliticsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sometimes, the party that led the country to independence was tied most closely to the primary sector: in many of the small Eastern Caribbean islands, the fortunes of those most associated with the maintenance of the banana sector-such as the United Workers Party (UWP) in St Lucia (see Joseph, 2011)-waxed and waned as it rose and declined. So, where some parties represented rural communities linked to those major export-agricultural sectors, and even today link enduring claims for substantive political freedom to wider questions of sovereignty (see Thompson, 2019a), others emerged in the urban settings-often self-described "labor" parties that primarily represented public sector workers-as states developed and modernized. But to describe these as cleavagebased would be a misrepresentation: party formation did not exemplify the same kind of elite vs labor, right vs left divide that exists in Europe; both groups of parties represented all kinds of workers via union linkages; they accepted, supported and defended the tripartite consensus; and, although at times nominally linked to rural or urban constituencies, drew wide support from across a generally homogenous society.…”
Section: Cleavageless Competition: Over Resources Not Ideas or Interestsmentioning
confidence: 99%