Abstract
Increasingly, women are the producers of many agricultural commodities around the world and feminist scholars astutely argue that women subsidize global agricultural production because the exchange value attributed to their products in commodity chains does not fairly compensate them. Although this is the case with women’s smallholder coffee in the state of Oaxaca, Mexico, in this paper we seek to move beyond an analysis of value and exploitation based on the commodity (in this case, coffee) to explore more fully women’s production practices. Drawing on debates over the question of value production in socionatures, we suggest that as women cultivate coffee, they also create socionatural spaces in which they produce and valorise a host of things and relations. Literature on diverse economies, Latin American theorizations of lo común (the common), and feminist political ecology help us examine how women also generate a multiplicity of values that exceeds their fraught relationship with global commodity chains. This perspective enables us to expand the way we understand women producers, seeing them simultaneously as subjects exploited by value extraction through the commodity chain to political actors engaging with other forms of valuing and promoting life.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 706-726 |
| Number of pages | 21 |
| Journal | Gender, Place and Culture |
| Volume | 32 |
| Issue number | 5 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 2025 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2024 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Funding
National Science Foundation under Grant number 1563779; The National Geographic Society under Grant number HJ009R17; and The Weissberg Foundation. We extend our deepest thanks to farmer-members of participating coffee producer organizations. This work benefitted from support by the Weissberg Family Foundation, National Science Foundation (Cultural Anthropology and Geography and Spatial Science Programs), National Geographic Society, University of Kentucky College of Arts and Sciences, and Instituto de Investigaciones Sociol\u00F3gicas at the Universidad Aut\u00F3noma Benito Ju\u00E1rez de Oaxaca. Much thanks to Arenys Santiago and Candelaria G\u00F3mez for invaluable research assistance and project management.
| Funders | Funder number |
|---|---|
| University of Kentucky Graduate School, College of Arts and Sciences | |
| Weissberg Family Foundation | |
| Instituto de Investigaciones Sociológicas at the Universidad Autónoma Benito Juárez de Oaxaca | |
| Weissberg Family Foundation | |
| U.S. Department of Energy Chinese Academy of Sciences Guangzhou Municipal Science and Technology Project Oak Ridge National Laboratory Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment National Science Foundation National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center National Natural Science Foundation of China | 1563779 |
| U.S. Department of Energy Chinese Academy of Sciences Guangzhou Municipal Science and Technology Project Oak Ridge National Laboratory Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment National Science Foundation National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center National Natural Science Foundation of China | |
| National Geographic Society | HJ009R17 |
| National Geographic Society |
Keywords
- coffee
- Commodity chains
- commoning
- feminisation of agriculture
- social reproduction
- value
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Gender Studies
- Demography
- Cultural Studies
- Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)