Governing pathological markets: Microbes, banana export markets, and speculative farming practices

IF 3 2区 社会学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Chi-Mao Wang, Ker-hsuan Chien
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Abstract

This paper examines the making and remaking of Taiwan's banana export market in response to the devastation caused by an outbreak of a novel infectious plant disease, Fusarium wilt disease Tropical Race 4 (TR4, Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. Cubense) . Taiwan was the world's fourth-largest exporter of bananas in the 1960s before the collapse of the market in the early 1970s. While scholars have drawn on actor-network theory-inspired performativity approach to understand the role of non-human actants in market-making, insufficient attention has been given to the distinct impacts of microbes on cases such as that of Taiwan's banana export market. Microbes’ creative and ever-evolving qualities constantly present challenges related to the control and containment of such non-human entities, for which no pre-existing or universally applicable solutions exist. Consequently, there is a lack of research that provides useful frameworks to understand such disease-plagued markets. To bridge this gap in the literature, we examine the remaking of Taiwan's banana export market in the aftermath of the TR4 crisis using a case study approach and develop the notion of pathological markets. Inspired by recent scholarship on biosecurity and related care practices, we outline two characteristics that shape pathological markets: (a) speculative and probiotic care practices and (b) the rescaling of market organisations. The results of the fieldwork conducted as part of the present study in laboratories, government offices and on banana farms lead us to contend that the growth and development of particular microbes in multispecies environments such as Taiwan's banana farms constantly pose significant challenges for market farming. Moreover, to co-exist with the threats posed by the growth and development of microbes such as those which cause Fusarium wilt disease TR4, growers in Taiwan's banana export market rely heavily on probiotic and speculative care practices.
治理病态市场:微生物、香蕉出口市场和投机性耕作方式
本文探讨台湾香蕉出口市场因应新型传染性植物枯萎病(Fusarium wilt disease Tropical Race 4, TR4, Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. Cubense)爆发所造成的破坏而做出的调整。在20世纪70年代初香蕉市场崩溃之前,台湾在上世纪60年代是全球第四大香蕉出口国。虽然学者们利用行动者网络理论启发的表演性方法来理解非人类行动者在做市中的作用,但对微生物对台湾香蕉出口市场等案例的独特影响的关注不足。微生物具有创造性和不断发展的特性,这对控制和遏制这种非人类实体不断提出挑战,目前尚无预先存在或普遍适用的解决办法。因此,缺乏研究提供有用的框架来理解这种疾病缠身的市场。为了弥补这方面的文献空白,我们以个案研究的方法检视台湾香蕉出口市场在TR4危机后的重塑,并提出病态市场的概念。受最近关于生物安全和相关护理实践的奖学金的启发,我们概述了塑造病态市场的两个特征:(a)投机和益生菌护理实践和(b)市场组织的重新规模。作为本研究的一部分,在实验室、政府办公室和香蕉农场进行的实地调查结果使我们认为,在台湾香蕉农场等多物种环境中,特定微生物的生长和发育不断对市场农业构成重大挑战。此外,为了与导致枯萎病TR4的微生物生长和发育所构成的威胁共存,台湾香蕉出口市场的种植者严重依赖益生菌和投机性护理措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
13.80%
发文量
101
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