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DOI: 10.1177/1749975507078190 © 2007 SAGE Publications and the British Sociological Association Contesting Ethical Trade in Colombia's Cut-Flower Industry: A Case of Cultural and Economic InjusticeUniversity of Warwick, UK, c.wright{at}warwick.ac.uk
gilmamadrid{at}yahoo.com Based on a case study of Colombias cut-flower industry, this article draws strategically on Nancy Frasers model of (in)justice to explore the mutual entwinement of culture and economy. It examines responses by cut-flower employers and their representatives to ethical trade discourses demanding economic justice for Colombias largely female cut-flower workers. It argues that employers misrecognition of both ethical trade campaigners and cut-flower workers may serve to deny and redefine claims of maldistribution.Through a home-grown code of conduct, employers also seek to appropriate ethical trade in their own interests. Finally, a gender coding of worker misrecognition ostensibly displaces workers problems from the economic realm to the cultural, offering the modernity of full capitalist relations as the solution. In further examining the responses to the responses by workers and their advocates, the contestation of ethical trade is highlighted and its prospects assessed.
Key Words: Colombia culture cut flowers economy ethical trade fairtrade misrecognition Nancy Fraser
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