2016
DOI: 10.1111/cuag.12075
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Borders Out of Register: Edge Effects in the U.S.–Mexico Foodshed

Abstract: This paper addresses how food systems and transboundary food supply chains are mediated and shaped by (cross-) cultural and geopolitical borders that function as selective filters. We focus on the ways in which the political boundary in a formerly cohesive foodshed generates "edge effects" that affect (1) food safety, and (2) food waste, particularly in desert communities adjacent to the U.S.-Mexico border. We hypothesize that as these various boundary lines get "out of register" with one another, their disson… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Technological changes, the rise of finance capital (Ho 2009 a ; Maurer ), and shifts in the global organization of supply chains (Bellante & Nabhan ; Tsing ; ) have undoubtedly changed experiences and understandings of labour, and by extension the emergent experiences and understandings of place. In both non‐industrialized and de‐industrialized contexts, millions are not just unemployed but surplus to the requirements of capital accumulation .…”
Section: Dislocating Labourmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Technological changes, the rise of finance capital (Ho 2009 a ; Maurer ), and shifts in the global organization of supply chains (Bellante & Nabhan ; Tsing ; ) have undoubtedly changed experiences and understandings of labour, and by extension the emergent experiences and understandings of place. In both non‐industrialized and de‐industrialized contexts, millions are not just unemployed but surplus to the requirements of capital accumulation .…”
Section: Dislocating Labourmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Numerous studies and practical experiences have demonstrated that as industrialization proceeds, production technologies become more and more complex, and the food industry structure become increasingly advanced. In this context, even a small food safety risk has the potential to threaten consumer dietary health throughout the food supply chain due to the butterfly effect ( 4 , 5 ). Therefore, government or market failures, either alone or combined, are difficult to avoid by relying solely on these actors (acting alone or together) to manage food safety risks.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%