SUSTAINABILITY ISSUES IN THE CAMEROON BANANA SUPPLY CHAIN

Bananas are a major staple as well as an important cash crop in developing countries and the most eaten fruit in Europe and Northern America. For decades, the banana economy has been a key example of trade injustice. The concentration of power in the hands of a few multinational companies has negati...

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Main Author: Kingsly Awang Ollong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul 2017-01-01
Series:Brazilian Journal of African Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://seer.ufrgs.br/rbea/article/view/67447
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spelling doaj-b089a91dbcd441d699427fb5da23dd3f2021-03-23T17:46:19ZengUniversidade Federal do Rio Grande do SulBrazilian Journal of African Studies2448-39232017-01-011210.22456/2448-3923.6744732049SUSTAINABILITY ISSUES IN THE CAMEROON BANANA SUPPLY CHAINKingsly Awang Ollong0The University of BamendaBananas are a major staple as well as an important cash crop in developing countries and the most eaten fruit in Europe and Northern America. For decades, the banana economy has been a key example of trade injustice. The concentration of power in the hands of a few multinational companies has negatively affected the lives of thousands of banana workers and small farmers. While this activity has generated considerable profit for the multinational corporations that operate the plantations, the labourers and the communities in which these plantations are found have suffered injustices in the hands of the companies. It is against this backdrop that this paper sets out to make an appraisal of some sustainability issues that have gone a long way to affect the lives of both the workers and the communities in the Njombe-Penja area which is one the key banana producing area in Cameroon.https://seer.ufrgs.br/rbea/article/view/67447multinational corporations, sustainability, supply chain agriculture, development
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kingsly Awang Ollong
spellingShingle Kingsly Awang Ollong
SUSTAINABILITY ISSUES IN THE CAMEROON BANANA SUPPLY CHAIN
Brazilian Journal of African Studies
multinational corporations, sustainability, supply chain agriculture, development
author_facet Kingsly Awang Ollong
author_sort Kingsly Awang Ollong
title SUSTAINABILITY ISSUES IN THE CAMEROON BANANA SUPPLY CHAIN
title_short SUSTAINABILITY ISSUES IN THE CAMEROON BANANA SUPPLY CHAIN
title_full SUSTAINABILITY ISSUES IN THE CAMEROON BANANA SUPPLY CHAIN
title_fullStr SUSTAINABILITY ISSUES IN THE CAMEROON BANANA SUPPLY CHAIN
title_full_unstemmed SUSTAINABILITY ISSUES IN THE CAMEROON BANANA SUPPLY CHAIN
title_sort sustainability issues in the cameroon banana supply chain
publisher Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
series Brazilian Journal of African Studies
issn 2448-3923
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Bananas are a major staple as well as an important cash crop in developing countries and the most eaten fruit in Europe and Northern America. For decades, the banana economy has been a key example of trade injustice. The concentration of power in the hands of a few multinational companies has negatively affected the lives of thousands of banana workers and small farmers. While this activity has generated considerable profit for the multinational corporations that operate the plantations, the labourers and the communities in which these plantations are found have suffered injustices in the hands of the companies. It is against this backdrop that this paper sets out to make an appraisal of some sustainability issues that have gone a long way to affect the lives of both the workers and the communities in the Njombe-Penja area which is one the key banana producing area in Cameroon.
topic multinational corporations, sustainability, supply chain agriculture, development
url https://seer.ufrgs.br/rbea/article/view/67447
work_keys_str_mv AT kingslyawangollong sustainabilityissuesinthecameroonbananasupplychain
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