Making Poverty: A History
Autor Thomas Linesen Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 iul 2008
A desperate situation is emerging which could soon leave little place for hundreds of millions of smallholders across the world, as the global supply chains of giant food corporations and supermarkets swallow them up. Poor countries have become newly vulnerable to price changes for crops like rice and wheat, and the situation is set to deteriorate further if global policies do not change. The author argues that debates about world trade negotiations have only highlighted part of the problem: we must turn our attention to wider economic policies, the workings of the markets themselves and the division of power along the supply chains, to establish a practical set of solutions. Combining analytical rigour with a clearly accessible examination of the key factors, the author deftly points to the forms that these solutions could take.
Preț: 161.57 lei
Preț vechi: 186.22 lei
-13% Recomandat
Puncte Express: 242
Preț estimativ în valută:
28.61€ • 33.42$ • 24.86£
28.61€ • 33.42$ • 24.86£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 21 februarie-07 martie
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781842779422
ISBN-10: 1842779427
Pagini: 176
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.24 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Zed Books
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1842779427
Pagini: 176
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.24 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Zed Books
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Introduction
1. Those who have fallen behind
2. How poverty is made
3. Do the market's job for it
4 Not farming but gambling
5 Getting out of the trap
6. Can we put history behind us?
Bibliography
Index
1. Those who have fallen behind
2. How poverty is made
3. Do the market's job for it
4 Not farming but gambling
5 Getting out of the trap
6. Can we put history behind us?
Bibliography
Index
Recenzii
Tom Lines combines a lifelong commitment to development with a thorough knowledge of the complexities of global markets. Cutting expertly through economic jargon and myth, he explains why markets, far from being neutral, reflect the power and politics of those who govern them, determining who wins and who loses from globalization. You don't have to agree with every detail of his analysis to learn from this salutary reminder that the current boom in commodity prices is not the end of a history of commodity dependence which has left deep scars on the developing world.
A timely, clearly-written book that shows how and why commodity markets fail, how they undermine food security and how poverty is made not fated. Lines unpicks the public policies, private standards and buyer power that impoverish but also discusses solutions; from prioritising food security not foreign trade, development of domestic and regional markets, reform of commodity markets and development of global competition policy to tackle the concentration of corporate power.
This book shines a spotlight exactly where it is needed -- on the 900 million poor people in rural areas in the world. Rather than being 'assigned to the economic scrap heap' by the way global markets are currently organised, this book shows how radically changed policies can both help these people out of poverty and can provide the engine for true sustainable and just development.
A book packed with clear arguments alongside tables and statistics showing how global economic policies have created poverty on the most local levels.
A most persuasive book.
Thomas Lines explains with science and erudite, committed scholarship why it is necessary to understand the History of Poverty in order to make poverty history. Historically embedded structures of production and international trade make peasant farmers of the South hostage to a value chain from which they pick up crumbs, whilst traders and financiers accumulate wealth. The answer is not to find a place in the existing value chain, but to break it. This book must form part of an obligatory learning discipline by all who care to make poverty history.
A timely, clearly-written book that shows how and why commodity markets fail, how they undermine food security and how poverty is made not fated. Lines unpicks the public policies, private standards and buyer power that impoverish but also discusses solutions; from prioritising food security not foreign trade, development of domestic and regional markets, reform of commodity markets and development of global competition policy to tackle the concentration of corporate power.
This book shines a spotlight exactly where it is needed -- on the 900 million poor people in rural areas in the world. Rather than being 'assigned to the economic scrap heap' by the way global markets are currently organised, this book shows how radically changed policies can both help these people out of poverty and can provide the engine for true sustainable and just development.
A book packed with clear arguments alongside tables and statistics showing how global economic policies have created poverty on the most local levels.
A most persuasive book.
Thomas Lines explains with science and erudite, committed scholarship why it is necessary to understand the History of Poverty in order to make poverty history. Historically embedded structures of production and international trade make peasant farmers of the South hostage to a value chain from which they pick up crumbs, whilst traders and financiers accumulate wealth. The answer is not to find a place in the existing value chain, but to break it. This book must form part of an obligatory learning discipline by all who care to make poverty history.