This article considers the different stories within Fair Trade and how they come together as a narrative that informs both the social movement of Fair Trade and the practice of Fair Trade business relationships. The circuit of culture is used to explore the meanings and understandings that are part of Fair Trade, from both a producer and a consumer point of view, and to demonstrate how these narratives are influenced by economic, political and social structures. However, the practice of Fair Trade also allows for the use of power in new ways, challenging some of the dominant modes of production and consumption.
2019. Insider and Outsider Analysis: Constructing, Deconstructing, and Reconstructing Narratives of Seychelles’ Geography Education. International Journal of Qualitative Methods 18
Deerman, M. Eugenia
2017. Spillover Effects: Explaining Narrative Divergences of the Christian Right, 1979‐1989. Journal of Historical Sociology 30:3 ► pp. 561 ff.
Bob Doherty, Tallontire, Anne & Valerie Nelson
2013. Fair trade narratives and political dynamics. Social Enterprise Journal 9:1 ► pp. 28 ff.
de Roldán, Karem Sánchez
2012. SOCIAL EXCLUSION, SOCIAL COHESION: DEFINING NARRATIVES FOR DEVELOPMENT IN LATIN AMERICA. Journal of International Development 24:6 ► pp. 728 ff.
Everitt, Angela & Ann Le Mare
2012. EVALUATING AS A MEANS TO ACHIEVE DEVELOPMENT ENDS. Journal of International Development 24:5 ► pp. 556 ff.
Jane Gibbon, Davenport, Eileen & Will Low
2012. The labour behind the (Fair Trade) label. Critical perspectives on international business 8:4 ► pp. 329 ff.
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