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Kevin Morgan, Terry Marsden, and Jonathan Murdoch: Worlds of Food: Place, Power, and Provenance in the Food Chain

Oxford University Press, New York, 2006, 225 pp, ISBN 0-19-927158-5

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Notes

  1. One disturbing aspect of reading this book that must have been more painful for the first two authors was the premature death of Jonathan Murdock, who had proven himself a major contributor to agrifood research.

  2. Although a consequence of globalization rather than of its minor sibling, agribusiness, it is worth noting that the “leaders” of the globalizing world can meet in urban locations like Seattle, Genoa, and Cancun, only behind barricades and massive police mobilization. Once it was the revolutionaries that had to cobble together the barricades, now it is the host national state.

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Correspondence to William H. Friedland.

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Friedland, W.H. Kevin Morgan, Terry Marsden, and Jonathan Murdoch: Worlds of Food: Place, Power, and Provenance in the Food Chain. Agric Hum Values 25, 291–294 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10460-008-9128-y

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10460-008-9128-y

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