RC-40 pre-conference session: Tuesday 25th June 10.00-15.00
Venue: Clarion Hotel & Congress. Conference room «Vega»
Convenors: Hilde Bjørkhaug: hilde.bjorkhaug@ruralis.no, Reidar Almås, Ruralis- Institute for rural and regional research, Steven Wolf, Cornell University
Financialization is the increased influence of financial actors and logics on social and economic life, and is one of the key drivers transforming food systems and rural economies around the world. Actions of financial actors, and their financial logics, are transforming agri-food systems in profound ways. It is shown that although financialization is a powerful dynamic, some recent developments suggest that the rollout of financialization is contradictory and uneven in different spaces and markets.
A recent book[1] revealed that financialized economic activities are not only being deployed by financial institutions, but also by national and private investment funds (SWFs) and state-backed organizations, for commercial purposes, for development, and for aid, among a host of other purposes. The 2008 food crisis changed agri-food policy rhetoric, turning what was previously considered ‘hidden’ protectionist policies of some Northern states into ‘food security’ discourse, where attempts were made to ensure a secure food supply in the face of global uncertainties. Some states have actively appropriated farmland abroad, while countries with food surpluses have supported financialization – within neoliberal globalization – as a mechanism to sell greater volumes of food in the global marketplace. Either way, the farming and food sectors have remained very attractive sites for investment.
Financialization of the agri-food system raises many ethical and moral questions. When nation states help to facilitate financialization it is important that they weigh up impacts upon small and medium scale farms and food businesses and those who occupy lands (either legally or illegally). The poor and least powerful can readily become more marginalized as financialization proceeds.
The proposed RC-40 mini-conference/pre-conference session invites scholars to give short presentations of current finacialisation research. The planned presentation format will be combined with generous time dedicated to open discussions on 1) the contours and impacts of the current, financialized, global agri-food system 2) urgent challenges and 3) future research needs.
[1] Bjørkhaug, H., A. Magnan & G. Lawrence (2018) The Financialization of Agri-Food Systems Contested Transformations. Routledge.
RC-40 pre-conference session
Time | Title | Author | |
10.00 | Welcome to the RC-40 pre-conference session | ||
1 | 10.10 | Agriculture as Financial Asset: Global Money and the Making of Institutional Landscapes’ | Stefan Ouma
Department of Human Geography
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2
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10.30 | Farmland values: media and public discourses around farmland investment in Canada and Australia | Andre Magnan
Department of Sociology and Social Studies University of Regina, Canada
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3 | 10.50 | Who actually are their allies? Gate-openers, counter-local actions, and paradoxes of financialized agriculture | Jana Lindbloom
Institute for Sociology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava, Slovakia
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4 | 11.10 | The financiers gaze on the “future farmer”– How financial actors generate farming futures and the futures they generate
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Egon Noe, University of Southern Denmark, ENOE@SAM.SDU.DK
Martin Thorsøe, Aarhus University
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5 | 11.30 | A comparative analysis of financial subjectivities guiding agricultural financialization
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Mikelis Grivinsa, Martin Hvarregaard Thorsøeb, Damian Mayec
aBaltic Studies Centre, mikelis.grivins@gmail.com bAarhus University, martinh.thorsoe@agro.au.dk cCountryside and Community Research Institute (CCRI),
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11.50 | Discussion | ||
12.00 | Lunchbreak | ||
6 | 12.40 | Mapping farmland ownership in Australia: Corporate, state and institutional capital investments since 2008
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Kiah Smith, Geoffrey Lawrence and Zannie Langford
School of Social Science, The University of Queensland k.smith2@uq.edu.au
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7 | 13.00 | Money with meaning – Emerging modes of ownership and investment in Danish farming
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Martin Thorsøe* and Egon Noe^,
* Aarhus University. martinh.thorsoe@agro.au.dk ^University of Southern Denmark, ENOE@SAM.SDU.DK
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8 | 13.20 | A Better Way to do Business: Supply Management in Canada as a Reflection of Food Sovereignty and Security
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Bruce Muirhead and Jodey Nurse-Gupta
University of Waterloo, Canada
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9 | 13.40 | Private Equity takeovers in the Nordic Food Sector. | Reidar Almås
Ruralis, Trondheim Norway
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10 | 14.00 | Institutional investment and multi-functional landscapes | Steven Wolf
Cornell University, USA |
11 | 14.20 | Moral, Ethics and Sustainability in Finacialisation: Examples from public investments | Jostein Brobakk* and Hilde Bjørkhaug*^
*Ruralis, Trondheim Norway ^Dep sociology and political science NTNU, Norway |
12 | 14.40 | Discussion | |
15.00 | End |