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How did Europeans achieve global dominance and continue to satisfy their ever-growing needs? How do we explain the effects this has on the rest of the world? In his magnum opus, published here in English for the first time as an open access book, world-renowned critical development scholar Benoit Daviron blends Braudelian history and a food systems approach to show how biomass--as the metabolism of societies and as a source of matter and energy--explains key historical phases of Western capitalist hegemony and the transitions between them. By examining various uses of biomass, technical production and extraction methods, forms of labour mobilization, and exchange systems, Daviron provides startling new insights into capitalist development from the 16th century to the present. This book is essential reading for students and scholars of critical approaches to global development, and for anyone interested in how capitalist domination came to be and how the bio-meatabolic imbalances it created might be redressed. The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com.
Auteur
Benoit Daviron is a French agronomist and agricultural economist at the French Agricultural Research Centre for International Development (CIRAD). He is also currently a visiting scholar at the University of California, Berkeley, USA.
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"In this open access magnum opus, published here in English for the first time, world-renowned critical development scholar Benoit Daviron blends Braudelian history and a food systems approach to show how biomass underpins the key historical phases of Western capitalist hegemony and the transitions between them"--
Contenu
General Introduction
Part I: Where we see the United Provinces build wealth and power by trading distant biomass, 1580-1705
Introduction
Part II: Where we see England pull ahead of France by exploiting its territory and its colonies
better, 1700-1846
Introduction
Part III: Where Great Britain, now a hegemon, mobilizes the world for its supply of biomass and prompts Europe to imitate her, 1815-1913
Introduction
Part IV: Where the rivalry between Germany, the United States, and others gives a key role
to the chemical industry, 1865-1945
Introduction
Part V: Where we see agriculture, under America's hegemony, become modern, conventional and food-focused, 1945-1972
Introduction
Part VI: American Hegemony, Season 2: The Return of Globalization
Introduction
General Conclusion