From railroad imperialism to neoliberal reprimarization: Lessons from regime-shifts in the Global Soybean Complex

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Standard

From railroad imperialism to neoliberal reprimarization: Lessons from regime-shifts in the Global Soybean Complex. / Mempel, Finn; Corbera, Esteve; Labajos, Beatriz Rodríguez et al.
In: Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space, Vol. 7, No. 2, 11.2024, p. 559-582.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{fe860daf77a847fa8bceeae323fb99a6,
title = "From railroad imperialism to neoliberal reprimarization: Lessons from regime-shifts in the Global Soybean Complex",
abstract = "Soybeans are ubiquitous in the global food system. As a major forest risk commodity, they are also at the heart of efforts to untangle the dynamics of land use change and associated impacts resulting from distant drivers. However, land system science has so far largely ignored the historically and socially embedded nature of these entanglements. This results in snapshot-like representations relying on neoclassical approaches to production and consumption. Here, we trace the evolution of the global soybean complex (GSC) since the late nineteenth century. We analyze how in the context of external developments soybeans have been channeled into different provisioning systems. This has occurred in a series of socio-ecological fixes, facilitated by socio-technological innovations and public sector interventions, motivated by different impediments to capital accumulation. Today, several emerging socio-technological practices promise to transform the GSC towards sustainability. We argue that the contemporary GSC inherits defining properties from the past, particularly the postwar strategy of using industrial animal farming to add value to surplus grains and oilseeds. The expanding GSC is therefore not merely a result of increasing demand, but rather the outcome of different provisioning systems{\textquoteright} continued dependence on soybeans. Future transitions will depend on public interventions and the influence of vested interest in current socio-metabolic patterns.",
keywords = "Sustainability Governance",
author = "Finn Mempel and Esteve Corbera and Labajos, {Beatriz Rodr{\'i}guez} and Edward Challies",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} The Author(s) 2023.",
year = "2024",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1177/25148486231201216",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "559--582",
journal = "Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space",
issn = "2514-8486",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Inc.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - From railroad imperialism to neoliberal reprimarization: Lessons from regime-shifts in the Global Soybean Complex

AU - Mempel, Finn

AU - Corbera, Esteve

AU - Labajos, Beatriz Rodríguez

AU - Challies, Edward

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2023.

PY - 2024/11

Y1 - 2024/11

N2 - Soybeans are ubiquitous in the global food system. As a major forest risk commodity, they are also at the heart of efforts to untangle the dynamics of land use change and associated impacts resulting from distant drivers. However, land system science has so far largely ignored the historically and socially embedded nature of these entanglements. This results in snapshot-like representations relying on neoclassical approaches to production and consumption. Here, we trace the evolution of the global soybean complex (GSC) since the late nineteenth century. We analyze how in the context of external developments soybeans have been channeled into different provisioning systems. This has occurred in a series of socio-ecological fixes, facilitated by socio-technological innovations and public sector interventions, motivated by different impediments to capital accumulation. Today, several emerging socio-technological practices promise to transform the GSC towards sustainability. We argue that the contemporary GSC inherits defining properties from the past, particularly the postwar strategy of using industrial animal farming to add value to surplus grains and oilseeds. The expanding GSC is therefore not merely a result of increasing demand, but rather the outcome of different provisioning systems’ continued dependence on soybeans. Future transitions will depend on public interventions and the influence of vested interest in current socio-metabolic patterns.

AB - Soybeans are ubiquitous in the global food system. As a major forest risk commodity, they are also at the heart of efforts to untangle the dynamics of land use change and associated impacts resulting from distant drivers. However, land system science has so far largely ignored the historically and socially embedded nature of these entanglements. This results in snapshot-like representations relying on neoclassical approaches to production and consumption. Here, we trace the evolution of the global soybean complex (GSC) since the late nineteenth century. We analyze how in the context of external developments soybeans have been channeled into different provisioning systems. This has occurred in a series of socio-ecological fixes, facilitated by socio-technological innovations and public sector interventions, motivated by different impediments to capital accumulation. Today, several emerging socio-technological practices promise to transform the GSC towards sustainability. We argue that the contemporary GSC inherits defining properties from the past, particularly the postwar strategy of using industrial animal farming to add value to surplus grains and oilseeds. The expanding GSC is therefore not merely a result of increasing demand, but rather the outcome of different provisioning systems’ continued dependence on soybeans. Future transitions will depend on public interventions and the influence of vested interest in current socio-metabolic patterns.

KW - Sustainability Governance

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85172004531&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1177/25148486231201216

DO - 10.1177/25148486231201216

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 7

SP - 559

EP - 582

JO - Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space

JF - Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space

SN - 2514-8486

IS - 2

ER -

Recently viewed

Researchers

  1. Michael Rathje

Publications

  1. Methoden-Muster: Partizipation und Verhandlung
  2. Introduction: From Dada Tricks to Post-Truth Politics
  3. From the plurality of transdisciplinarity to concrete transdisciplinary methods
  4. Formative Assessment in Mathematics Instruction
  5. Diagnosebegleiter - Einzeltestkartei
  6. Feature selection for density level-sets
  7. Self-regulated learning and self assessment in online mathematics bridging courses
  8. Silent reading fluency and comprehension in bilingual children
  9. Notting Hill Gate 4 Basic
  10. Mythos "Stunde Null"
  11. Ereignis
  12. [U]topische Körper in der Adoleszenz
  13. Musical Interface Agendas. Musical Appropriation via Technological Pre-configuration
  14. Boosting and sustaining passion
  15. Frank Fischer/Herbert Gottweis (Hg.) The Argumentative Turn Revisited.
  16. Vorräte - Schätzung des Fertigstellungsgrades bei der Percentage of Completion Methode
  17. The Return of History - An Exchange between Christoph Behnke, Cornelia Kastelan, and Ulf Wuggenig
  18. Hydration and Dehydration of CaO/ Ca(OH)2 and CaCl2 / CaCl2 * 6 H2O– TGA/ DSC studies
  19. Structure matters
  20. Influence of strontium, silicon and calcium additions on the properties of the AM50 alloy
  21. Frontiers of Democracy (Special Issue)
  22. Evaluierung medizinischer Volumenrendering-Algorithmen durch empirische Studien
  23. Peer Evaluation Can Reliably Measure Local Knowledge
  24. 303, MPC, A/D
  25. Comparing U.S. and German Cost Accounting Methods
  26. Social movements in defense of public water services
  27. The Role of Linked Social-Ecological Systems in a Mobile Agent-Based Ecosystem Service from Giant Honey Bees (Apis dorsata) in an Indigenous Community Forest in Palawan, Philippines
  28. Versteigern statt Verschenken!
  29. Intrinsic Motivation in Bilingual Courses on Bionics and Molecular Biology in an Out-of-School Lab
  30. Exkursion in die Coy-Galaxis
  31. Towards a decision support system for radiotherapy business continuity in a pandemic crisis
  32. Konstruktive Kritik
  33. Outsourcing
  34. From grief to hope in conservation
  35. Edvard Munch
  36. Skizze
  37. Die Liebe zur Kunst
  38. Monodominance in tropical forests: modelling reveals emerging clusters and phase transitions
  39. Managing uncertainty in the marketing of new-technology products
  40. Productivity and the Product Scope of Multi-Product Firms: A Test of Feenstra-Ma
  41. Academic self-concept and causal attributions for success and failure amongst elementary school children
  42. On Knowing Too Much