Alternative food and agriculture movements increasingly rely on market-based approaches, particularly voluntary standards and certification, to advance environmental sustainability and social justice. Using a case study of an ecological shrimp project in Indonesia that became certified organic, this paper raises concerns regarding the impacts of certification on alternative food and agriculture movements, and their aims of furthering sustainability and justice. Drawing on George Ritzer’s McDonaldization framework, I argue that the ecological shrimp project became McDonaldized with the introduction of voluntary standards and certification. Specifically, efficiency, calculability, predictability, and control became key characteristics of the ...
Private standards, including ecolabels, have been posed as a governance solution for the global fish...
Session "Contested sustainability discourses: from food sovereignty to sustainable intensification"S...
Graduation date: 2011Around the globe, an array of alternative agrifood movements has emerged largel...
Voluntary standards and certification schemes aim to play an important role in the creation of a mor...
Abstract With consumers and producers seeking alternatives to corporate, industrial food, systems of...
This article explores the emergence of ecolabeling of organic products in the context of the contemp...
This paper examines the role of certification in alternative agri-food networks (AAFNs), which are i...
The global circulation of food and agricultural commodities is increasingly influenced by the ethica...
Shrimp is a major aquaculture species in Indonesia. Despite the Indonesian government’s effort to re...
Producer participation in markets, including modernized food value chains (MFVCs) and conservation p...
As a society evolving and innovating at a pace faster than ever before seen in human history, we fin...
When consumers select seafood products from displays or from restaurant menus, they can easily base ...
The teleology of progress causes us to believe that our agro-food system, flawed as it is, must be t...
Articulating an account of food justice in isolation from broader questions about sustainability wou...
Private standards, including ecolabels, have been posed as a governance solution for the global fish...
Private standards, including ecolabels, have been posed as a governance solution for the global fish...
Session "Contested sustainability discourses: from food sovereignty to sustainable intensification"S...
Graduation date: 2011Around the globe, an array of alternative agrifood movements has emerged largel...
Voluntary standards and certification schemes aim to play an important role in the creation of a mor...
Abstract With consumers and producers seeking alternatives to corporate, industrial food, systems of...
This article explores the emergence of ecolabeling of organic products in the context of the contemp...
This paper examines the role of certification in alternative agri-food networks (AAFNs), which are i...
The global circulation of food and agricultural commodities is increasingly influenced by the ethica...
Shrimp is a major aquaculture species in Indonesia. Despite the Indonesian government’s effort to re...
Producer participation in markets, including modernized food value chains (MFVCs) and conservation p...
As a society evolving and innovating at a pace faster than ever before seen in human history, we fin...
When consumers select seafood products from displays or from restaurant menus, they can easily base ...
The teleology of progress causes us to believe that our agro-food system, flawed as it is, must be t...
Articulating an account of food justice in isolation from broader questions about sustainability wou...
Private standards, including ecolabels, have been posed as a governance solution for the global fish...
Private standards, including ecolabels, have been posed as a governance solution for the global fish...
Session "Contested sustainability discourses: from food sovereignty to sustainable intensification"S...
Graduation date: 2011Around the globe, an array of alternative agrifood movements has emerged largel...