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http://hdl.handle.net/11375/25921
Title: | The Potential of Contracting in Global Agri-Food Governance: The Pursuit of Public Interests Through Private Contracts |
Authors: | Muirhead, Jacob |
Advisor: | Porter, Tony |
Department: | Political Science |
Keywords: | Global Governance;Private Governance;Agriculture;Private Law;Contract Farming;Private Authority;Globalization |
Publication Date: | 2020 |
Abstract: | This dissertation contends that to appropriately address important cross-border problems and pursue public interest(s) in an increasingly globalized world, we must deal directly with the more complex, networked, interdependent and hybrid governance forms which have grown increasingly common alongside globalization. Consequently this, dissertation examines the largely unexplored possibility of commercial contracts to act as a governance tool capable of improving the ethical quality and effectiveness of global agri-food governance to address critical challenges in that sector. These include those associated with food safety, ecological sustainability and biodiversity, gender equality, access to food, poor working conditions, inequality as well as issues of representation and inclusion in decision-making. To do so, the dissertation advances a novel conceptual framework of commercial contracting that opens up space to explore and identify features of contracting which enable it to go beyond private interests to also address public ones. To demonstrate this, the dissertation utilizes empirics from my case study, which is grounded in the transnational pineapple value chain between Ghana and Western Europe. This dissertation makes four key contributions to knowledge. First, it has developed a novel and generalizable conceptual framework of contractual governance through which activists and policymakers can address critical global agri-food governance challenges. It has also advanced practical options to do so. Second, this dissertation has important implications for global and private agri-food governance literatures, which have ignored the commercial contract and the influential role that it plays in the governance of food. Third, this thesis contributes to a body of existing literature indicating that “private” governance arrangements may be more capable than many often given them credit for in governing in democratically legitimate ways over issue areas of broad public interest. Finally, this thesis contributes empirical data in a field and area of study which is notoriously opaque and inaccessible. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/11375/25921 |
Appears in Collections: | Open Access Dissertations and Theses |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Muirhead_Jacob_NB_2020September_PhDPoliticalScience.pdf | Thesis examining the potential of private contracting to address critical governance challenges and issues of democratic legitimacy in global agri-food governance | 2.08 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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