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Feeding fears: competing discourses of interdependency, sovereignty, and China's food security

Author:
Boland, A  


Journal:
POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY


Issue Date:
2000


Abstract(summary):

Following the release of the 1994 report 'Who will feed China?' by the Worldwatch Institute, there has been much debate over the implications of China's growing demand for grain. The question of China's food production has elicited a variety of responses. While for some it raises the specter of regional and global instability as China becomes an environmental threat, for others the entrance of China into the world market promises increased trade and profits. In this paper I explore the responses in China and the US to the different notions of interdependence which have shaped the debate. I first turn to how concerns over China's food supply have, despite appeals to the concepts of global environmental and economic interdependence, become linked to classical state-centered geopolitical concerns such as 'sovereignty' and 'containment.' I then look at how the debate has also been actively distanced from national security concerns through the invocation of an alternative interdependence founded on the logic of commerce. I conclude by arguing for the need within critical geopolitics to further examine the circulation of strategic texts between and within states, particularly in the analysis of texts that map worlds beyond the boundaries of North America and Europe. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.


Page:
55---76


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