Adler, S.J.1994: World's apple production increases dramatically. Good Fruit Grower 15 February, 9.
2.
Amin, A. and Thrift, N.1994: Living in the global. In Amin, A. and Thrift, N., editors, Globalization, institutions, and regional development in Europe, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1-22.
3.
Arce, A. and Marsden, T.K.1993: Social construction of international food: a new research agenda. Economic Geography69, 293-311.
4.
Arizpe, L. and Aranda, J.1983: Women workers in the strawberry agribusiness in Mexico . In Nash, J. and Fernandez-Kelly, M.P., editors, Women, men, and the international division of labor, Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 174-93.
5.
Barnet, R.J. and Cavanagh, J.1994: Global dreams. New York: Simon & Schuster.
6.
Brecher, J. and Costello, T.1994: Global village or global pillage. Boston, MA: South End Press.
7.
Bullard, R.D., editor, 1993: Confronting environmental racism: voices from the grassroots. Boston, MA: South End Press.
8.
Burawoy, M.1985: The politics of production: factory regimes under capitalism and socialism. London: Verso.
9.
Burbach, R. and Rosset, P.1994: Chiapas and the crisis of Mexican agriculture (policy brief: Food First). Oakland, CA: Institute for Food and Development Policy.
10.
Buss, F.L.1993: Forged under the sun: the life of Maria Elena Lucas. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.
11.
Carney, J.1993: Converting the wetlands, engendering the environment: the intersection of gender with agrarian change in The Gambia. Economic Geography69, 329-48.
12.
Cloke, P. and Thrift, N.1990: Class and change in rural Britain. In Marsden, P., Lowe, P. and Whatmore, S., editors, Rural restructuring: global processes and their responses. London : David Fulton, 165-81.
13.
Clunies-Ross, T. and Hildyard, N.1992: The politics of industrial agriculture. The Ecologist22, 65-71.
14.
Conklin, E.1994: Harvesting young labor. Seattle Post-Intelligncer19 April.
15.
Cook, A.K. and Jordan, M.W.1995: Changes in the Hispanic origin population. Unpublished paper, Department of Rural Sociology, Washington State University.
16.
Cook, I.1994: New fruits and vanity: symbolic production in the global food economy. In Bonanno, A., Busch, L., Friedland, W. , Gouveia, L. and Mingione, E., editors, From Columbus to ConAgra: the globalization of agriculture and food, Lawrence, KS : University of Kansas Press, 232-50.
17.
Crush, J.1991: The discourse of progressive human geography. Progress in Human Geography15, 395-414.
18.
Du Toit, A.1993: The micro-politics of paternalism: the discourses of management and resistance on South African fruit and wine farms. Journal of Southern African Studies19, 314-36.
19.
Escobar, A.1995: Encountering development: the making and unmaking of the third world. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
20.
Etxezarreta, M.1992: Transformation of the labour system and work processes in a rapidly modernising agriculture: the evolving case of Spain. In Marsden, T., Lowe, P. and Whatmore, S., editors, Labour and locality: uneven development, London: David Fulton, 44-67.
21.
Feierman, S.1990: Peasant intellectuals. Madison, WI : University of Wisconsin Press.
22.
Fink, D.1992: Agrarian women: wives and mothers in rural Nebraska, 1880-1940 . Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.
23.
Friedberger, M.1989: Shake out: Iowa farm families in the 1980s. Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky.
24.
Friedland, W.1994: The new globalization: the case of fresh produce. In Bonanno, A., Bush, L., Friedland, W., Gouveia, L. and Mingione, E., editors, From Columbus to ConAgra: the globalization of agriculture and food, Lawrence, KS: University of Kansas Press, 210-31.
25.
Friedland, W.H., Busch, L., Buttle, F.H. and Rudy, A.P.1991: Towards a new political economy of agriculture. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
26.
Friedmann, H.1982: The political economy of food: the rise and fall of the post-war international food order. In Buroway, M. and Skocpol, T., editors, American journal of sociology88 (special supplement).
27.
— 1987: Family farms and international food regimes. In Shanin, T., editor, Peasants and peasant societies , Oxford: Blackwell, 247-58.
28.
— 1991: Changes in the international division of labor: agri-food complexes and export agriculture. In Friedland, W.H., Busch, L., Buttle, F.H. and Rudy, A.P., editors, Towards a new political economy of agriculture, Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 65-93.
29.
— 1994: The international relations of food: the unfolding crisis of national regulation. In Harriss-White, B. and Hoffenberg, Sir R., editors, Food: multidisciplinary perspectives, Oxford and Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 174-204.
30.
Geranios, N.K.1992: Mostly Hispanic work force toils for low pay on farms . Seattle Times 31 August.
31.
Goldin, I.1987: The reconstitution of coloured identity in the Western Cape. In Marks, S. and Trapido, S., editors, The politics of race, class and nationalism in twentieth-century South Africa, London and New York: Longman , 156-81.
32.
Goodman, D. and Redclift, M.1991: Refashioning nature: food, ecology and culture. London and New York: Routledge .
33.
Goodman, D. and Watts, M.1994: Reconfiguring the rural or fording the divide? Capitalist restructuring and the global agro-food system. The Journal of Peasant Studies22, 1-49.
34.
Jarosz, L.1993: Defining and explaining tropical deforestation: shifting cultivation and population growth in colonial Madagascar (1896-1940). Economic Geography69, 366-79.
35.
Kabeer, N.1994: Reversed realities: gender hierarchies in development thought. London and New York: Verso.
36.
Keegan, T.1988: Facing the storm: portraits of black lives in rural South Africa. London: Zed Books.
37.
Kilborn, P.T.1992: Law fails to stem abuse of migrants, US panel reports . The New York Times 22 October, A1.
38.
Koc, M.1994: Globalization as a discourse. In Bonanno, A., Busch, L., Friedland, W.H., Gouveia, L. and Mingione, E., editors, From Columbus to ConAgra: the globalization of agriculture and food, Lawrence, KS: University of Kansas Press, 265-80. Krebs, A.1992: The corporate reapers. Washington, DC: Essential Information.
39.
Lawson, V.1995: Beyond the firm: restructuring gender divisions of labor in Quito's garment industry under austerity. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space13, 415-44.
40.
Le Heron, R.1993: Globalized agriculture. Oxford: Pergamon Press.
41.
Le Heron, R., Roche, M. and Johnston, T.1994: Pluriactivity: an exploration of issues with reference to New Zealand's livestock and fruit agrocommodity systems. Geoforum25, 155-72.
42.
Levy, B.1977: Seasonal migration in the Western Cape. In Kooy, A. and Hendrie, D. , editors, Farm labour in South Africa, Cape Town: David Philip, 87-102.
43.
Little, P. and Watts, M. , editors, 1994: Living under contract: contract farming and agrarian transformation in sub-Saharan Africa. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press.
44.
Lowe, P., Marsden, T. and Whatmore, S., editors, 1994: Regulating agriculture. London: David Fulton.
45.
Mackintosh, M.1989: Gender, class and rural transition: agribusiness and the food crisis in Senegal. London and Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Zed Books.
46.
Marsden, T.1994: Opening the boundaries of the rural experience: progressing critical tensions. Progress in Human Geography18: 523-31.
47.
Marsden, T., Lowe, P. and Whatmore, S.1992: Labour and locality: emerging research issues in labour and locality. In Marsden, T., Lowe, P. and Whatmore, S. , editors, Labour and locality: uneven development and the rural labour process, London: David Fulton, 1-18.
48.
Martin, P.L., editor, 1984: Migrant labor in agriculture. Berkeley, CA: Giannini Foundation of Agricultural Economics, University of California, Berkeley.
49.
Marx, K.1967: Capital: a critique of political economy (Vol. 1; from the 1887 English text). New York: International Publishing Company.
50.
Massey, D.1994: Space, place, and gender. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
51.
McMichael, P.1992: Tensions between national and international control of the world food order: contours of a new food regime. Sociological Perspectives35, 343-65.
52.
— 1993: World food system restructuring under a GATT regime. Political Geography12, 198-214.
53.
Morgan, D.1980: Merchants of grain. New York: Penguin Books.
54.
Murphy, A.B.1991: Regions as social constructs: the gap between theory and practice. Progress in Human Geography15, 22-35.
55.
Nash, J. and Fernandez-Kelly, M.P., editors, 1983: Women, men and the international division of labor. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
56.
O'Rourke, A.D.1994: The world apple market. New York, London and Norwood, Australia: Food Products Press .
57.
Padavic, I.1993: Agricultural restructuring and the spatial dynamics of US women's employment in the 1970s. Rural Sociology58, 210-32.
58.
Peet, R. and Watts, M.1993: Development theory and environment in an age of market triumphalism. Economic Geography69, 227-53.
59.
— 1996 (forthcoming): Liberation ecologies: environment, development and social movements. New York: Routledge.
60.
Pile, S.1991: A load of bloody idiots. Somerset dairy farmers view of their political world. Political Geographer Quarterly10, 405-21.
61.
Pudup, M.B.1988: Arguments within regional geography. Progress in Human Geography12, 369-90.
62.
Pugliese, E.1991: Agriculture and the new division of labor. In Friedland, W., Busch, L. , Buttel, F. and Rudy, A., editors, Towards a new political economy of agriculture , Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 137-50.
63.
Qazi, J.A.1995: Farming women's work in north central Washington's apple industry. Paper presented at the Association of American Geographers annual meeting, March.
64.
Redclift, M.1989: Sustainable development: exploring the contradictions . London and New York: Routledge.
65.
Rosa, S. and Dong, J.1992: The future looks bright for US horticultural trade. AgExporter September, 4-6.
66.
Ruiz, V.1987: Cannery women, cannery lives. Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press.
67.
Sanderson, S., editor, 1985: The Americas in the new international division of labor. New York: Holmes & Meier.
68.
— 1986: The emergence of the 'world steer': inter-nationalization and foreign domination in Latin American cattle production. In Tullis, F.L. and Hollist, W.L., editors, Food, the state, and international political economy, Lincoln, NB: University of Nebraska Press, 123-47.
69.
Sayer, A. and Walker, R.1992: The new social economy: reworking the division of labor . Cambridge, MA: Blackwell.
70.
Seager, J.1993: Earth follies: coming to feminist terms with the global environmental crisis. New York: Routledge.
71.
Slesinger, D.P. and Pfeffer, M.J.1992: Migrant farm workers. In Duncan, C., editor, Rural poverty in America, New York: Auburn House, 135-53.
72.
Thomas, R.1985: Citizenship, gender and work. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
73.
Thompson, G.D. and Martin, P.L.1991: Immigration reform and the agricultural labor force. Labor Law Journal42, 528-36.
74.
Waldman, P.L.1993: Here you will remain: adolescent experience on farms in the Western Cape. MA thesis, Department of Social Anthropology , University of Cape Town, South Africa.
75.
Watts, M.1994: Life under contract: contract farming, agrarian restructuring, and flexible accumulation. In Little, P. and Watts, M., editors, Living under contract, Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 21-77.
76.
Whatmore, S.1993: Agricultural geography. Progress in Human Geography17, 84-91.
77.
— 1994: Global agro-food complexes and the refashioning of rural Europe. In Amin, A. and Thrift, N., editors, Globalization, institutions, and regional development in Europe, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 46-67.
78.
Whitehead, A.1990: Food crisis and gender conflict in the African countryside . In Bernstein, H., Crow, B., Mackintosh, M. and Martin, C., editors, The food question, New York: Monthly Review Press, 54-68.
79.
Zavella, P.1987: Women's work and chicano families: cannery workers of the Santa Clara Valley. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.