
This Book Is An Inquiry Into The Role Of Law In The Contemporary Political Economy Of Hunger. In The Work Of Many International Institutions, Governments, And Ngos, Law Is Represented As A Solution To The Persistence Of Hunger. This Presentation Is Evident In The Efforts To Realize A Human Right To Adequate Food, As Well As In The Positioning Of Law, In The Form Of Regulation, As A Tool To Protect Society From 'unruly' Markets. In This Monograph, Anna Chadwick Draws On Theoretical Work From A Range Of Disciplines To Challenge Accounts That Portray Law's Role In The Context Of Hunger As Exclusively Remedial. The Book Takes As Its Starting Point Claims That Financial Traders 'caused' The 2007-8 Global Food Crisis By Speculating In Financial Instruments Linked To The Prices Of Staple Grains. The Introduction Of New Regulations To Curb The 'excesses' Of The Financial Sector In Order To Protect The Food Insecure Reinforces The Dominant Perception That Law Can Solve The Problem. Chadwick Investigates A Number Of Different Legal Regimes Spanning Public International Law, International Economic Law, Transnational Governance, Private Law, And Human Rights Law To Gather Evidence For A Counterclaim: Law Is Part Of The Problem. The Character Of The Contemporary Global Food System-a Food System That Is Being Progressively 'financialized'-owes Everything To Law. If World Hunger Is To Be Eradicated, Chadwick Argues, Then Greater Attention Needs To Be Paid To How Different Legal Regimes Operate To Consistently Privilege The Interests Of The Wealthy Few Over The Needs Of Poor And The Hungry.
This book investigates the role of law in the contemporary political economy of hunger, challenging the prevailing notion that legal frameworks serve primarily as a remedy for food insecurity. Anna Chadwick, a scholar in international law and political economy, utilizes a multidisciplinary approach to argue that legal regimes are not merely neutral tools for protection but are active participants in the financialization of the global food system. By examining the 2007-8 global food crisis, she demonstrates how specific legal structures consistently prioritize the interests of financial actors over the needs of vulnerable populations.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in international economic law and political economy recognize this work as a rigorous critique of the intersection between financial markets and food security. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for scholars and practitioners interested in the structural failures of global governance.
Page Count:
220
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192557211
ISBN-13:
9780192557216
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