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Linking power and inequality in global value chains
Authors:Juliane Lang  Stefano Ponte  Thando Vilakazi
Affiliation:1. Centre for Business and Development Studies, Copenhagen Business School, Frederiksberg, Denmark;2. Centre for Competition, Regulation and Economic Development, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africa
Abstract:
There is increasing interest in the study of globalization on whether the emergence and consolidation of global value chains (GVCs) have exacerbated inequalities within and across nations and/or how GVCs may be leveraged to mitigate them. Although power asymmetries have been identified as a central factor shaping (un)successful GVC participation, dominant discourses still disregard the links between power and inequality or use these concepts interchangeably. In this article, we provide an analytical approach to GVC-related inequalities (within, along and through value chains) and examine how they may co-evolve with different types of power (bargaining, demonstrative, institutional and constitutive). We apply this approach to the case study of the hake value chain in South Africa to illustrate how existing inequalities are manifested, challenged, mitigated or exacerbated—and draw an agenda for future research.
Keywords:fish  global value chains  inequality  power  South Africa
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