During the 1990s, the Eastern Caribbean was caught in a bitter trade dispute between the US and EU over the European banana market. When the World Trade Organization rejected preferential access for Caribbean growers in 1998 the effect on the region’s rural communities was devastating. This volume examines the “banana wars” from the vantage point of St. Lucia’s Mabouya Valley, whose recent, turbulent history reveals the impact of global forces. The author investigates how the contemporary structure of the island’s banana industry originated in colonial policies to create a politically “stable” peasantry, followed by politicians’ efforts to mobilize rural voters. These political strategies left farmers dependent on institutional and market protection, leaving them vulnerable to any alteration in trade policy. This history gave way to a new harsh reality, in which neoliberal policies privilege price and quantity over human rights and the environment. However, against these challenges, the author shows how the rural poor have responded in creative ways, including new social movements and Fair Trade farming, in order to negotiate a stronger position for themselves in the in a shifting global economy.
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List of Illustrations
List of Tables, Figures and Maps
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1. Linking the Personal, the Local and the Global
Chapter 2. An Island in History
Chapter 3. Banananomics: Work and Identity Among Island Growers
Chapter 4. St. Lucia in the Global Banana Trade
Chapter 5. Banana Politics
Chapter 6. Privatization and Fragmentation
Chapter 7. Survivors
Chapter 8. Desperate Times, Desperate Measures
Chapter 9. Fair Trade in Discourse and Practice
Chapter 10. Fair Trade and Conventional Farming in the Mabouya Valley
Chapter 11. Conclusion: A New World or a New Kind of Dependence?
References Cited
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Mark Moberg is a Professor of Anthropology at the University of South Alabama. His research centers on the economic and political dimensions of rural development in Central America and the Caribbean. He has published extensively in cultural and applied anthropology and is the author or co-editor of three previous books: Citrus, Strategy and Class (1992), Myths of Ethnicity and Nation (1997), and Banana Wars (2003; edited with Steve Striffler).