Rethinking Value Chains : Tackling the Challenges of Global Capitalism

EPUB and EPDF available Open Access under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. This original volume brings together academics and activists from Europe to think creatively about the social and environmental imbalances of global production and how to reform the current economic system.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Palpacuer, Florence
Other Authors: Smith, Alistair
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Bristol : Policy Press, 2021.
Series:Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Table of Contents:
  • Front Cover
  • Rethinking Value Chains: Tackling the Challenges of Global Capitalism
  • Copyright information
  • Table of contents
  • List of figures and tables
  • Notes on contributors
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Rethinking value chains in times of crisis
  • Notes
  • References
  • Part I Mounting issues in the governance of global value chains
  • one Global production networks: the state, power and politics
  • Introduction
  • Reconsidering state roles in GPNs
  • GPNs and the integral state
  • 'States of discipline': GPNs, the integral state and labour control
  • Towards deglobalisation and new economic nationalism?
  • Notes
  • References
  • two Global inequality chains: how global value chains and wealth chains (re)produce inequalities of wealth
  • Introduction
  • The structure of GVCs and value capture
  • GVC upgrading and the 'smile curve'
  • Global wealth chains
  • The global inequality chain
  • Conclusions and ways forward
  • Note
  • References
  • three Orchestrating environmental sustainability in a world of global value chains
  • Introduction
  • Orchestration for sustainability
  • Governance and power in GVCs
  • Empirical insights from the coffee and biofuels GVCs
  • Coffee
  • Bargaining power
  • Demonstrative power
  • Institutional power
  • Constitutive power
  • Orchestration
  • Biofuels
  • Bargaining power
  • Demonstrative power
  • Institutional power
  • Constitutive power
  • Orchestration
  • Conclusion
  • References
  • four Trade policy for fairer and more equitable global value chains
  • Introduction
  • Setting the context
  • Bilateral agreement: FTAs
  • Making the entering into force of an agreement conditional on ratification and application of a list of conventions
  • Making the TSD chapters subject to the same dispute settlement as other parts of the agreement
  • Addressing enforcement
  • Addressing the negative distributional effects of trade within FTAs
  • Preferential access: the Generalized System of Preferences regime
  • Concluding remarks
  • Notes
  • References
  • Part II Strengthening the role of people and democracy
  • five Civil society action towards judiciary changes in the regulation of global value chains
  • Introduction
  • CORE: a civil society coalition pushing for corporate responsibility
  • A creative approach to regulation in a neoliberal policy environment
  • The Transparency in Supply Chains clause in the Modern Slavery Act 2015
  • Monitoring and enforcement: the missing pieces
  • From reporting to acting: mandatory HRDD and parent company liability
  • Alignment across Europe, without Europe?
  • Note
  • References
  • six Assessing the economic, social and environmental impacts of global value chains as a tool for change
  • Introduction
  • Information for citizen action: the background
  • Mining data or data minefields? The missing information on value chains