From Food Chains to Food Webs: Regulating Capitalist Production and Consumption in the Food System

Author:

Parker Christine1,Johnson Hope2

Affiliation:

1. Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia;

2. Law School, Queensland University of Technology, Queensland 4001, Australia;

Abstract

This review addresses food as a topic of sociolegal studies. We show that the divide between production and consumption in law and social science is increasingly untenable in the context of contemporary globalizing, industrializing food chains underpinned by a productivist ideology and supported by a consumptogenic cultural economy. Sociolegal studies of food are well-suited to grappling with the complexity of production–consumption dynamics through regulatory governance studies of hybridized (public and private) supply chain standards. Yet we argue for an expanded focus on the embeddedness of food chains in social, political, and, importantly, ecological food webs. We suggest that sociolegal studies into ecologically based regulation, countermovements, and an expansive version of the human right to food (that includes nature and animals) can particularly contribute to an understanding of the possibilities for regulating capitalism by seeking to constrain globalizing, industrialized food chains.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Law,Sociology and Political Science

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