Peripheral Vision: Globalization, Sustainable Development, and the Political Ecology of Cotton Production in Mali
Abstract
This chapter examines the evolving dynamic among cotton production for the world market, environmental degradation, and global development paradigms in Mali. It examines how cotton production policy in Mali has changed over time and how this evolution implicate globalization discourse. It also examines the environmental impacts of cotton production, how this is problematized, and how solutions are evoked within globalization discourse. A major sub-text of this analysis is that the economy-environment nexus in Mali is the result of intersecting processes operating at different spatial scales: the global cotton market, national level policy, and local production decisions; all underlain by environmental impacts.
Suggested Citation
William G. Moseley. "Peripheral Vision: Globalization, Sustainable Development, and the Political Ecology of Cotton Production in Mali" Globalization, the Third World State and Poverty-Alleviation in The Twenty-First Century. Ed. Logan, B.. Hampshire, UK: Ashgate Publishing Limited, 2002. 181-196.
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/william_moseley/8