Record Details

Of Old and New Business Ethics: How Fair Trade Becomes Patronage and Paternalism in a Darjeeling Tea Plantation

Journal of Business Anthropology

View Archive Info
 
 
Field Value
 
Title Of Old and New Business Ethics: How Fair Trade Becomes Patronage and Paternalism in a Darjeeling Tea Plantation
 
Creator Kaba, Arnaud
 
Subject Fair Trade; labor; patronage; business ethics; tea plantations; neoliberalism
 
Description This paper is about Fair Trade and business ethics. It analyses data from fieldwork conducted in a famous Darjeeling tea plantation which practices biological and biodynamic farming and is labeled as Fair Trade. Its aim is to show how the plantation owner, using aggressive marketing of his engagement with eco-friendly and corporately-responsible management, has managed to regenerate an old patronage system more or less similar to industrial paternalism, but with its roots in colonial as well as indigenous domination structures. Disappointed by their unions, workers have had no alternative but to accept this form of governance, and some even acknowledge it as a good one. This case is a good example of how Fair Trade, which claims to empower workers, can be used to fuel a system which results in their disempowerment as social actors.
 
Publisher Copenhagen Business School
 
Contributor
 
Date 2016-05-24
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://ej.lib.cbs.dk/index.php/jba/article/view/5006
 
Source Journal of Business Anthropology; 2016: Special Issue 3: Business Ethics; 20-39
2245-4217
 
Language eng
 
Relation http://ej.lib.cbs.dk/index.php/jba/article/view/5006/5440