Sugar Sugar
Resources

Sugar

    • 5.0 • 1 Rating
    • $24.99
    • $24.99

Publisher Description

There is more sugar in the world's diet than ever before, but life is far from sweet for the exploited producers making nature's 'white gold' and the unhealthy consumers eating it.

Why has the billion-dollar sugar trade created such inequities? In this insightful analysis, Ben Richardson argues that the most compelling answers to this question can be found in the dynamics of global capitalism. Led by multinational companies, the mass consumption of sweetened snacks has taken hold in the Global South and underpinned a new wave of foreign investment in sugar production. The expansion of large-scale and highly-industrialised farms across Latin America, Asia and Africa has kept the price of sugar down whilst pushing workers out of jobs and rural dwellers off the land. However, challenges to these practices are gathering momentum. Health advocates warning against costly diseases like diabetes, trade unions fighting for better pay, and local residents campaigning for a cleaner environment are all re-shaping the way sugar is consumed and produced. But to truly transform sugar, Richardson contends, these political activities must also address the profit-driven nature of food and farming itself.

GENRE
Politics & Current Affairs
RELEASED
2015
26 October
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
232
Pages
PUBLISHER
Polity Press
SELLER
John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd
SIZE
2.7
MB
Sugar Sugar
2022
The Condition of Sustainability The Condition of Sustainability
2005
Consumption in the Age of Affluence Consumption in the Age of Affluence
2002
The Global Food Economy The Global Food Economy
2008
Food in Society Food in Society
2016
Towards A New Political Economy Of Agriculture Towards A New Political Economy Of Agriculture
2021
Say Everything Say Everything
2024
Lisa Loses her Clothes in Town Lisa Loses her Clothes in Town
2024
Free Trade Agreements and Global Labour Governance Free Trade Agreements and Global Labour Governance
2020
Timber Timber
2013
Food Food
2020
Carbon Carbon
2018
Uranium Uranium
2017
Coffee Coffee
2014
Water Water
2013