Colony in a Cup

Gregory Dicum
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

Originating in East Africa, coffee was one of the first internationally traded commodities. An Arab monopoly on the bean was broken by the development of tropical European colonies. Coffee was the ideal colonial crop, but its cultivation relied upon widespread slavery and abusive economic relationships between regions. Many of these institutionalized inequities remain embedded in post-colonial coffee trading patterns. Rich coffee-consuming nations and the multinational trading and roasting companies that service their demand enjoy neocolonial dominance of growers around the world, many of whom are small landowners and family farmers in poor countries. At the same time, developed-world governmental interest in producing countries has waned, leaving multinationals free to pursue their own policies in large parts of the world. At present, there is a worldwide slump in coffee prices that is devastating economies throughout the developing world without translating into meaningfully lower prices for coffee consumers. One of the few programs to step into this political void is Fair Trade. By reconfiguring the trading relationship between coffee producers and consumers to emphasize a more direct relationship, Fair Trade appropriates globalized trading networks for the benefit of both coffee growers and coffee drinkers.
杯子里的菌落
咖啡起源于东非,是最早进行国际贸易的商品之一。欧洲热带殖民地的发展打破了阿拉伯人对咖啡豆的垄断。咖啡是理想的殖民地作物,但它的种植依赖于广泛的奴隶制和地区之间滥用的经济关系。许多这些制度化的不平等仍然植根于后殖民时期的咖啡贸易模式中。富裕的咖啡消费国和满足其需求的跨国贸易和烘焙公司在世界各地享有种植者的新殖民统治地位,其中许多种植者是贫穷国家的小土地所有者和家庭农民。与此同时,发达国家政府对生产国的兴趣减弱,使跨国公司可以在世界大部分地区自由地奉行自己的政策。目前,咖啡价格在全球范围内大幅下跌,这对发展中国家的经济造成了毁灭性的打击,但对咖啡消费者来说,价格却没有大幅下降。进入这一政治空白的少数项目之一是公平贸易。通过重新配置咖啡生产者和消费者之间的贸易关系,以强调更直接的关系,公平贸易为咖啡种植者和咖啡饮用者的利益利用了全球化的贸易网络。
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