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Everyday Sustainability Gender Justice and Fair Trade Tea in Darjeeling
Debarati Sen

Rs 695 Pb 2017
Pp. 251+xx
ISBN: 978-93-85606-16-8
for sale in South Asia only
Everyday Sustainability takes readers to ground zero of market-based sustainability initiatives in the idyllic tea hill-gardens of Darjeeling, India, where Fair Trade ostensibly promises gender justice to minority Nepali women engaged in organic tea production. These women tea farmers and plantation workers have distinct entrepreneurial strategies and everyday practices of social justice that, at times, dovetail with, and, at other times, rub against the tenets of the emerging global morality market.
Sen questions why women beneficiaries of transnational justice-making projects remain sceptical about the potential for economic and social empowerment through Fair Trade while simultaneously seeking the use of movement to give voice to their situated demands for mobility, economic advancement, and community level social justice.
 
Debarati Sen
is Associate Professor of Anthropology and International Conflict Management at Kennesaw State University. She has been published in leading journals, such as Anthropology in Action; Critique of Anthropology; Feminist Studies; Environment and Society; and Anthropology of Work Review and has also contributed to anthologies like New South Asian Feminisms: Paradoxes and Possibilities (2012) and Indigenous Conflict Management Strategies (2014).
 
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