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Cross-Border Innovation in South–North Fair Trade Supply Chains: The Opportunities and Problems of Integrating Fair Trade Governance into Northern Public Procurement

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Collaboration for Sustainability and Innovation: A Role For Sustainability Driven by the Global South?

Part of the book series: Greening of Industry Networks Studies ((GINS,volume 3))

Abstract

Fair trade is a means of governing South–North supply chains to increase the benefits of international trade integration for poor southern producers of agricultural and handicraft goods. Although the approach itself is arguably innovative in comparison with commercially orientated supply chains, many consider that its formalization within third-party, Fairtrade International certification, has facilitated a process of conventionalization. Furthermore, Fairtrade certification is considered to dominate producer and consumer attention; and therefore marginalize other more innovative and radical fair trade approaches, making differentiation increasingly difficult. The chapter investigates one aspect of this narrative by elucidating the effects of the Fairtrade Towns scheme: a promotional program viewed to be precipitating “Fairtrade absolutism” within the wider movement. Focusing on the devolved region of Scotland, evidence for this process is uncovered and the implications for Southern producers highlighted through a parallel case study of the National Smallholder Farmers Association in Malawi. Here it is found that the costs of certification and their geographic restriction are actively isolating some producers; which combined with “Fairtrade absolutism” in consumer countries undermines the principle of fairer access to northern export markets. The final section however, connects the producer and consumer cases, by reporting on an innovative fairly traded supply chain constructed between Malawian rice farmers and Scottish schools. Overall, the chapter highlights the continued potential for innovation within the fair trade movement, and suggests that such opportunities will emerge where supply chain actors are more proactively embedded in wider understandings of development and trade justice.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    Although the chapter uses the name Fairtrade International throughout the text, some documentary sources retain the name Fairtrade Labelling Organisations (FLO) as they originate from before the name change.

  2. 2.

    This situation is more complex in reality given the break of Fair Trade USA from the wider international system, although this chapter does not consider this latest event in the history of fair trade.

  3. 3.

    This refers to Coase’s (1937) seminal definition of the “firm” as economic space in which market coordination is suspended.

  4. 4.

    Interview with Council Representative 05/01/2010.

  5. 5.

    This signalling out of Malawi is grounded in the historical precedent of Scottish involvement with the area as early as 1859 (Scottish Government 2007), when the celebrated explorer, Dr Livingstone, is believed to have contributed beneficially to the area.

  6. 6.

    The rate of this depression has now become evident after the liberalization of the MK in May 2012 when markets have settled around a rate of MK250/USD, although reportedly still below the black-market level of closer to MW275/USD (Reuters 2012).

  7. 7.

    The Guardian shelter provides shelter for relatives and patients visiting and caring for friends and family staying at the hospital.

  8. 8.

    Interview with Anonymous Stakeholder 16/11/2009.

  9. 9.

    Interview with Joshua Varela 5/11/2009.

  10. 10.

    Interview with Andrew Parker 23/11/2009.

  11. 11.

    Personal communication with an anonymous informant.

  12. 12.

    Personal communications with anonymous informants.

  13. 13.

    Interview with Sylvia Grey 16/06/2009.

  14. 14.

    Interview with John Riches 19/03/2009. Interview with Grace Irvine 16/06/2009.

  15. 15.

    Interview with Grace Irvine 16/06/2009.

  16. 16.

    The fieldwork on which this chapter is based also identified very similar processes of negotiation and contestation concerned with the interpretation of what it means “to do fair trade” in Malawi.

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Smith, A.M. (2014). Cross-Border Innovation in South–North Fair Trade Supply Chains: The Opportunities and Problems of Integrating Fair Trade Governance into Northern Public Procurement. In: Vazquez-Brust, D., Sarkis, J., Cordeiro, J. (eds) Collaboration for Sustainability and Innovation: A Role For Sustainability Driven by the Global South?. Greening of Industry Networks Studies, vol 3. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-7633-3_5

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