Theme:
Global Agricultural Value Networks and Contract
Farming in the Contemporary Global South
15 – 19 January 2018, Harare
Introduction
The main theme of the forthcoming Summer School 2018
extends the primary concerns of the Summer School 2017,
which explored the diversity of labour questions in
the Global South, to focus primarily on the countryside
and, in particular, the functioning of corporate and
contract farming, and the associated global agricultural
value networks (GAVNs). There will also be a secondary
focus on the extractive industries and associated value
networks which often operate alongside agriculture.
The ascendency of the so-called Global Commodity Chains
(GCCs)/Global Value Chains (GVCs)/Global Supply Chains
(GSCs)/Global Production Networks (GPNs) in the recent
decades is generally well acknowledged. This has happened
across all major sectors of the economy, from the extractive
and industrial to the service sectors, and agriculture
is no exception in this regard. In fact, a handful of
global firms and corporations have come to occupy significant
power in the agricultural value networks around the
world in several activities, which include inter alia
retail chains in final products, supply of agri-inputs
such as seeds, pesticides and fertilizers, and research
and development.
Agricultural Value Network: Mechanism
In a very simple/literal sense, the global agricultural
value networks (GAVNs) include a set of actors, linked
in a sequence of activities, which add value in bringing/supplying
a product from its raw material stage to the final consumer.
Such actors range from large international and domestic
corporates/business houses, agribusiness companies,
public and private research and development agencies,
trading and procurement agencies, etc. on the one hand
to farmers, peasants and landless labourers on the other.
Activities of such networks are facilitated by the government
agri-policies as also by the powerful international
institutions. As is also well known, in the recent years
multilateral agencies have often emerged as strong advocates
of promoting the so called ‘responsible investments’
through such GAVNs. These reports often provide very
optimistic accounts of GAVNs and the champion the role
of big corporations in different ways e.g. as suppliers,
distributors, traders, R&D facilitators, buyers
of agricultural produce and marketing strategists, etc.
These rosy accounts overlook several adverse outcomes
and processes associated with the ascendency of GAVNs
including loss of biodiversity, accelerated land alienation,
concentration and control of resources, disappearing
livelihoods, weakening of food security etc. in large
parts of the developing world. In tandem with, the ascendency
of neo-liberal macroeconomic policies, the growing power
of oligopolistic corporations has created huge distress
in several countries in Africa, Latin America and Asia.
Extreme manifestations of what is akin to agrarian crisis
in some countries include, for instance, suicides by
farmers in India.
Conceptually, in the GAVNs, as in any GVN, core dimensions
of the embedded relationship among the different actors
hinge around business/work/labour relations and distributional
issues. Although, juridically, different actors in value
networks appear to be independent of each other, but
in reality are entangled in highly unequal power relations.
Whether it is economic transactions relating to inputs
or outputs, it is the lead firms, which call the shots,
and farmers, peasants and agricultural labourers are
at the receiving end. Analysts often distinguish between
vertical and horizontal relationship in these value
networks: the vertical relationships generally denote
the hierarchy of actors, essentially to capture the
underlying power relations, e.g. from the lead firms
to the final producers such as farmers, peasants and
agricultural labourers. The horizontal relationship,
as the term denotes, is essentially about relationship
between those who are on a similar footing. These vertical
and horizontal relationships in the GAVNs are critical
in influencing distributional outcomes as well as the
conditions of workers, including their employment and
wages, and the ecological challenges which they face.
The world of work for the majority of such producers
consists of fragile and vulnerable conditions and overwhelming
majority of them make a living through a collection
of diverse economic activities, spanning agricultural
and extractive activities, across rural and urban areas
and international boundaries. One may, justifiably,
quibble over fine-tuning of the relevant concepts, but
it would be hardly off the mark to consider this large
and heterogeneous segment as being co-terminus with
Marx’s Relative Surplus Population (RSP).
Given the scenario briefly sketched above, the Summer
School 2018 will engage with the relevant questions
and issues, focusing on the world of labour with respect
to GAVNs, corporate and contract farming, and the parallel
extractive activities. Potential participants in the
forthcoming Summer School are encouraged to examine
the different dimensions of the structural/systemic
issues of GAVNs in countries of the global south. Gender
dimensions associated with all the relevant themes should
be kept in sharp focus. The persistent gender segmentation
of productive and reproductive work in the agrarian
political economy and gender inequalities in access
to and control of resources have meant that farmers,
peasants and agricultural labourers do not experience
GAVNs in gender neutral ways, particularly in a context
of extreme social differentiation. Therefore, the gendered
experiences of actors within GAVNs have to be accounted
for both as a cross-cutting theme and in its own right.
We therefore encourage contributions, which address
the gender dimensions of all the proposed thematic areas.
As already indicated, topics could include conceptual
and empirical discussions of the following for different
countries and regions:
-
Formation
and growing power of oligopolies in GAVNs;
-
Historical antecedents of colonial plantations and
post-colonial state farms
-
The bargaining power of different actors in GAVNs;
-
The dialectics of the quantitative and qualitative
attributes underlying corporate and contract farming,
nationally and globally;
-
Growing Corporate power on output and input markets
and their implications for labour/livelihoods;
-
Gender and social differentiation in GAVNs;
-
Extractive industries and the role of small- and
large-scale mining;
-
Implications for food security;
-
Implications for ecology;
-
Emerging conditions of work and workers;
-
Alternatives and resistances to corporate agriculture.
In
sum, all these issues, to be deliberated in the proposed
Summer School would seek to reflect on some of the major
challenges and key concerns associated with contemporary
capitalism, the development of GAVNs and other value
networks, and the question of labour with a focus on
the Global South. As always, it will bring together
leading as well as young scholars from diverse disciplines
as well as activists, from Africa, Latin America, and
Asia in order to engage with the complexities of the
labour process at the current juncture.
Interested scholars are invited to submit paper proposals
or abstracts (not more than 300 words) no later than
30 June 2017. Authors of selected papers will be requested
to develop their full papers by 30 September 2017 and
will be invited to participate at the 2018 Summer School
in Harare (funds permitting). Some of the articles may
also be selected for publication in the Agrarian South:
Journal of Political Economy and normal peer review
process will apply.
Paper proposals should be submitted to Walter
Chambati: walter@aiastrust.org
and copied to Professor Praveen Jha:
praveenjha2005@gmail.com.
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