Broadening and Deepening: Soy Expansions in a World-Historical Perspective

This article assesses the ongoing South American soy expansion from a world-historical perspective, comparing the case of Brazil with the cases of China and the USA. For this purpose, it applies the concept of commodity frontier, involving both external and internal modes of capitalist incorporatio...

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Main Author: Ernst Langthaler
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: UniEVANGELICA 2020-05-01
Series:Historia Ambiental Latinoamericana y Caribeña
Subjects:
USA
Online Access:https://halacsolcha.org/index.php/halac/article/view/435
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spelling doaj-cd1be8f4d1974345b476c2f5c00a790a2020-11-25T02:49:28ZspaUniEVANGELICAHistoria Ambiental Latinoamericana y Caribeña2237-27172020-05-0110210.32991/2237-2717.2020v10i2.p244-277Broadening and Deepening: Soy Expansions in a World-Historical PerspectiveErnst Langthaler This article assesses the ongoing South American soy expansion from a world-historical perspective, comparing the case of Brazil with the cases of China and the USA. For this purpose, it applies the concept of commodity frontier, involving both external and internal modes of capitalist incorporation. The Chinese soy expansion (1900s–1930s) shows a predominant shift of the external frontier, associated with the peasant mode of farming. The US soy expansion (1930s–1970s) represents a predominant shift of the internal frontier, connected to the entrepreneurial mode of farming. The Brazilian soy expansion (1970s–2010s) reveals a flexible combination of extensive and intensive frontier shifts, corresponding with the capitalist mode of farming. These commodity booms were driven not only by nation states, capitalist enterprises and social movements, but also by the potentials and limitations of the soybean plant itself. Shifts of commodity frontiers often disrupted society and nature and, hence, were contested among diverse actors, both human and non-human. https://halacsolcha.org/index.php/halac/article/view/435SoybeanSoy ExpansionCommodity FrontierMode of FarmingChinaUSA
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ernst Langthaler
spellingShingle Ernst Langthaler
Broadening and Deepening: Soy Expansions in a World-Historical Perspective
Historia Ambiental Latinoamericana y Caribeña
Soybean
Soy Expansion
Commodity Frontier
Mode of Farming
China
USA
author_facet Ernst Langthaler
author_sort Ernst Langthaler
title Broadening and Deepening: Soy Expansions in a World-Historical Perspective
title_short Broadening and Deepening: Soy Expansions in a World-Historical Perspective
title_full Broadening and Deepening: Soy Expansions in a World-Historical Perspective
title_fullStr Broadening and Deepening: Soy Expansions in a World-Historical Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Broadening and Deepening: Soy Expansions in a World-Historical Perspective
title_sort broadening and deepening: soy expansions in a world-historical perspective
publisher UniEVANGELICA
series Historia Ambiental Latinoamericana y Caribeña
issn 2237-2717
publishDate 2020-05-01
description This article assesses the ongoing South American soy expansion from a world-historical perspective, comparing the case of Brazil with the cases of China and the USA. For this purpose, it applies the concept of commodity frontier, involving both external and internal modes of capitalist incorporation. The Chinese soy expansion (1900s–1930s) shows a predominant shift of the external frontier, associated with the peasant mode of farming. The US soy expansion (1930s–1970s) represents a predominant shift of the internal frontier, connected to the entrepreneurial mode of farming. The Brazilian soy expansion (1970s–2010s) reveals a flexible combination of extensive and intensive frontier shifts, corresponding with the capitalist mode of farming. These commodity booms were driven not only by nation states, capitalist enterprises and social movements, but also by the potentials and limitations of the soybean plant itself. Shifts of commodity frontiers often disrupted society and nature and, hence, were contested among diverse actors, both human and non-human.
topic Soybean
Soy Expansion
Commodity Frontier
Mode of Farming
China
USA
url https://halacsolcha.org/index.php/halac/article/view/435
work_keys_str_mv AT ernstlangthaler broadeninganddeepeningsoyexpansionsinaworldhistoricalperspective
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