Value Chains, Social Inclusion and Economic Development

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agricultural supply chains
Agro Food Chains
Agro Food Supply Chains
BMU
Bridging Social Capital
Business Systems Perspective
Business Systems Theory
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farmer
FFS
FFS Approach
FFS Farmer
FFS Group
field
firms
global
global commodity governance
governance
GPN
GPN Approach
GVC Perspective
inclusive business systems analysis
lead
Lead Firms
Lobster Fishery
multi-stakeholder partnerships
network
Norm Life Cycle Model
Organic Cotton
Palo Santo
pro-poor development
production
Rainforest Alliance
school
Small Scale Fishers
Smallholder Inclusion
smallholder participation
Sustainable Food Products
Territorial Embedding
Thai Shrimp
Tr Od
voluntary sustainability standards

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415591638
  • Weight: 740g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 24 May 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Lead firms, development organisations, donors and governments view value chains and voluntary standards as vital instruments for achieving millennium development goals through trade and market-related interventions. The precise foundations for these development strategies, which suggest positive development outcomes from integration of poor actors into value chains, are as yet underdeveloped. The interdisciplinary work in this volume shows how trade is managed and asks theory-driven questions about how value chains relate to locally-rooted development processes.

Policy makers and development practitioners are increasingly using value chain analysis to frame pro-poor development interventions. This book offers multiple conceptualizations of development outcomes of inclusion of small producers, firms and workers in value chains. Processes of inclusion at different scales are unpacked in order to identify the terms of participation of small producers, firms and workers. As value chains are embedded, the book further argues that inclusion can be conceptualized as the degree of alignment between value chain logics and the institutions and capacities in the local business system. The combination of inclusive governance and endogenous development informs a grounded debate on roles of development-oriented partnerships.

Chapters in this volume draw on multiple strands of economics, sociology, political science, geography and management studies; and for empirical grounding engage in comparative analysis of cases from Latin America, SubSaharan Africa and East and South East Asia. These are combined with processes taking place at a global level, such as the proliferation of standards and the growth of roundtables and multi-stakeholder partnerships. The contributions explore contrasts – between contexts, between industries or commodities/products, and between conceptual frameworks; and the context dependency of development impact necessitates cross-case investigations. This collection will be of interest to scholars in development studies, economics, business studies, as well as to development policy makers.

A.H.J. (Bert) Helmsing is Professor of Local and Regional Development, International Institute of Social Studies at Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands.

Sietze Vellema is Associate Professor at the Technology and Agrarian Development group of Wageningen University, the Netherlands, and Senior Researcher/Program Leader at their Agricultural Economics Research Institute.