Jungle beef: consumption, production and destruction, and the development process in the Brazilian Amazon

Abstract The environmental impacts of the global livestock industry are expected to continue increasing due to high meat consumption among affluent consumers in developed nations, and "new" consumers in emerging countries, such as Brazil. There is substantial research on the connections be...

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Main Author: Jeffrey Hoelle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 2017-09-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/20964
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spelling doaj-c69f559d6af14019b633f5ea17da760c2020-11-25T00:28:29ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04512017-09-0124174376210.2458/v24i1.2096420399Jungle beef: consumption, production and destruction, and the development process in the Brazilian AmazonJeffrey Hoelle0University of California, Santa Barbara, USAAbstract The environmental impacts of the global livestock industry are expected to continue increasing due to high meat consumption among affluent consumers in developed nations, and "new" consumers in emerging countries, such as Brazil. There is substantial research on the connections between international meat consumption and the destruction of Latin American environments, but less is known about the links between production/destruction and consumption in developing settings. In the western Amazon state of Acre, Brazil, increasing beef consumption is directly linked with local cattle production and environmental destruction, providing an opportunity to examine the relationships between these processes in a developing context. Interviews, participant-observation, and a standardized survey provide data on perceptions of beef and meat preferences, and how these relate to practices and patterns of consumption among a range of groups, from urban environmentalists to beef-loving cowboys. The results reveal how the hierarchical ordering of foods, with beef at the top, maps onto similar hierarchies of status and class, as well as notions of strength and nutrition. The analysis of beef consumption in a developing setting illustrates how beef is both a signifier of development and the symbolic and material fuel for a development process in which individuals, society, and the environment are transformed and improved. This study of local connections complements macro- and regional-level research on destruction and consumption linkages by offering insights on why consumers in a developing setting choose beef, and how the rubble and destruction of expanding Latin American agricultural frontiers is hidden, ignored, or written off in a discourse emphasizing the social and economic benefits of development. Keywords: Amazonia, beef, Brazil, cattle ranching, consumption, deforestation, development, food, meathttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/20964
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeffrey Hoelle
spellingShingle Jeffrey Hoelle
Jungle beef: consumption, production and destruction, and the development process in the Brazilian Amazon
Journal of Political Ecology
author_facet Jeffrey Hoelle
author_sort Jeffrey Hoelle
title Jungle beef: consumption, production and destruction, and the development process in the Brazilian Amazon
title_short Jungle beef: consumption, production and destruction, and the development process in the Brazilian Amazon
title_full Jungle beef: consumption, production and destruction, and the development process in the Brazilian Amazon
title_fullStr Jungle beef: consumption, production and destruction, and the development process in the Brazilian Amazon
title_full_unstemmed Jungle beef: consumption, production and destruction, and the development process in the Brazilian Amazon
title_sort jungle beef: consumption, production and destruction, and the development process in the brazilian amazon
publisher University of Arizona Libraries
series Journal of Political Ecology
issn 1073-0451
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Abstract The environmental impacts of the global livestock industry are expected to continue increasing due to high meat consumption among affluent consumers in developed nations, and "new" consumers in emerging countries, such as Brazil. There is substantial research on the connections between international meat consumption and the destruction of Latin American environments, but less is known about the links between production/destruction and consumption in developing settings. In the western Amazon state of Acre, Brazil, increasing beef consumption is directly linked with local cattle production and environmental destruction, providing an opportunity to examine the relationships between these processes in a developing context. Interviews, participant-observation, and a standardized survey provide data on perceptions of beef and meat preferences, and how these relate to practices and patterns of consumption among a range of groups, from urban environmentalists to beef-loving cowboys. The results reveal how the hierarchical ordering of foods, with beef at the top, maps onto similar hierarchies of status and class, as well as notions of strength and nutrition. The analysis of beef consumption in a developing setting illustrates how beef is both a signifier of development and the symbolic and material fuel for a development process in which individuals, society, and the environment are transformed and improved. This study of local connections complements macro- and regional-level research on destruction and consumption linkages by offering insights on why consumers in a developing setting choose beef, and how the rubble and destruction of expanding Latin American agricultural frontiers is hidden, ignored, or written off in a discourse emphasizing the social and economic benefits of development. Keywords: Amazonia, beef, Brazil, cattle ranching, consumption, deforestation, development, food, meat
url https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/20964
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