The Politics and Ethics of the Just Price

Ethnographies of Market Exchange

Peter Luetchford|Giovanni Orlando
Emerald
Emerald

This book can be opened with

Glassboxx eBooks and audiobooks can be opened on phones, tablets, iOS and Android devices

Hardback
9781787435742
19 June 2019
£74.99
eBook (PDF)
9781787435735
19 June 2019
£74.99
eBook (ePub)
9781787439597
19 June 2019
£74.99

Note on our eBooks and Audiobooks: you can read our eBooks (ePUB or PDF) and listen to audiobooks on the free Emerald Books app on iOS, Android, and desktop. Or read and listen on Emerald's online reader (ePUB eBooks and audiobooks only). To purchase a digital book you will need to create an account if you don’t already have one. After purchasing you will receive instructions on how to get started.

  • Description
  • Contents
  • About
Prices permeate contemporary life. From the cost of basic foodstuffs in developing countries to the pay of CEOs in rich ones, the question of the politics and ethics of pricing everything through the market dominates public life. At the same time, we know that dilemmas about how to value fairly, but also efficiently, goods and services have been with us for more than two thousand years, since the times of Aristotle in Ancient Greece. Through the course of the centuries, important thinkers like Thomas Aquinas, Adam Smith and Karl Marx all devoted considerable effort to try to understand how prices could reflect the intrinsic worth of the objects workers produce and exchange with other people. This is the question of the "just price." This volume represents the first systematic attempt to address this ancient debate through the use of qualitative empirical research, particularly ethnography.  

The volume comprises a substantial introduction that sets out the terms of the debate, proposing four different approaches to the just price, plus eight case studies based on fieldwork carried out in four different continents (Africa, Asia, Europe and Latin America), ranging from topics such as fair trade, human rights and recycling, to organic agriculture, the rose oil industry, rural and urban marketplaces.  

Bringing together the most recent scholarship in economic anthropology and associated fields to investigate the social, political and ethical consequences of market prices on ordinary people, this book is of interest to researchers in anthropology, sociology, history and geography.

Introduction: Toward an Anthropology of the Just Price: History, Ethnography, Critique; Peter Luetchford and Giovanni Orlando Chapter 1. Market, Morality and (Just) Price: The Case of the Recycling Economy in Turkey; Demet Ş. Dinler Chapter 2. When the Big Ones Abandon the Marketplace: Morals and Politics of Price in Equatorial Guinea; Alba Valenciano-Mañé  Chapter 3. Pecunia non olet but Does Rose Money Smell? On Rose Oil Prices and Moral Economy in Isparta, Turkey; Lale Yalçın-Heckmann  Chapter 4. Just Prices? Challenging Values at an Organic Cooperative in Southern Spain; Peter Luetchford   Chapter 5. Market Relations as Social Relations: Prices and the Moral Economy of Corn and Bean Trading in Rural Nicaragua; Santiago Ripoll  Chapter 6. Tuscan Values; Jeff Pratt  Chapter 7. Just Compensation? The Price of Death and Injury after the Rana Plaza Garment Factory Collapse; Rebecca Prentice  Chapter 8. Practicing the Just Price: Fair Trade and the Limits of Ethical Consumption in the Global North; Giovanni Orlando Afterword; James G. Carrier

    Peter Luetchford is Senior Lecturer at the University of Sussex, UK. He has carried out fieldwork in Costa Rica, Spain and the UK, and published on fair trade, ethical consumption, and political cultures of food. He is currently researching historical experiences and practices of work and crisis in Andalusia, Spain. 
    Giovanni Orlando is Marie Curie Fellow at the University of Turin, Italy. He has done research and written on aspects of the Italian food economy, especially organic and fair trade foods, both in the north and south of the country. He is also interested in labor movements and industrial democracy.