This chapter uses world-systems analysis to explain how Chia production evolved from constituting a staple food in the Aztec "world empire" to become integrated in the world-economy system. The first section explains its use and distribution in pre-Columbian times. It highlights its role in the economic system and its articulation within the religious and productive sectors of the Aztec Empire. A second section reviews current chia production and exports mainly in Latin America, in order to map major producers, distributors, mergers, trends and local politics influencing its trade. The analysis explains how chia production and distribution processes dramatically changed in the last 20 years due to different regional factors and increasin...
Several pseudo-cereals (plants not belonging to the Poaceae family but with uses similar to those of...
The emergence of agriculture in Mexico was a factor of great relevance, which allowed the developmen...
We know what we eat, but do we eat what we know? Our diet extends far beyond nutrients and food avai...
Chia (Salvia hispanica L.) is an ancient crop from Central America which has been recently rediscov...
This research explores the processes involved in the commodification of quinoa, a grain native to th...
This chapter examines the increase in global demand for quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa Willd.) and consi...
The incursion of the Inka empire, Tawantinsuyu, into the Argentine Northwest combined different stra...
The "Great Chichimeca" is considered as a region of constant cultural exchanges between sedentary an...
Quinoa’s revival has roused much interest in Andean as well as in European and North American countr...
There are products that nourish the body and soul, are present daily and resist most structural tra...
This paper uses a semiotic analysis and a global commodity chain approach to examine yerba mate as a...
Corn\u27s status as a critical food crop, and its location within indigenous new world cosmographies...
The principal motivation of this thesis is to know why the pre-Columbian products are a boom in the ...
Tortillas and products made from maize provided subsistence to early Mesoamerican civilizations, and...
Quinoa has been a staple food for Andean populations for millennia. Today, it is a much-appreciated ...
Several pseudo-cereals (plants not belonging to the Poaceae family but with uses similar to those of...
The emergence of agriculture in Mexico was a factor of great relevance, which allowed the developmen...
We know what we eat, but do we eat what we know? Our diet extends far beyond nutrients and food avai...
Chia (Salvia hispanica L.) is an ancient crop from Central America which has been recently rediscov...
This research explores the processes involved in the commodification of quinoa, a grain native to th...
This chapter examines the increase in global demand for quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa Willd.) and consi...
The incursion of the Inka empire, Tawantinsuyu, into the Argentine Northwest combined different stra...
The "Great Chichimeca" is considered as a region of constant cultural exchanges between sedentary an...
Quinoa’s revival has roused much interest in Andean as well as in European and North American countr...
There are products that nourish the body and soul, are present daily and resist most structural tra...
This paper uses a semiotic analysis and a global commodity chain approach to examine yerba mate as a...
Corn\u27s status as a critical food crop, and its location within indigenous new world cosmographies...
The principal motivation of this thesis is to know why the pre-Columbian products are a boom in the ...
Tortillas and products made from maize provided subsistence to early Mesoamerican civilizations, and...
Quinoa has been a staple food for Andean populations for millennia. Today, it is a much-appreciated ...
Several pseudo-cereals (plants not belonging to the Poaceae family but with uses similar to those of...
The emergence of agriculture in Mexico was a factor of great relevance, which allowed the developmen...
We know what we eat, but do we eat what we know? Our diet extends far beyond nutrients and food avai...