Jennifer Clapp

Political Economy of Food, Agriculture and Environment

Explaining Growing Glyphosate Use: The Political Economy of Herbicide-Dependent Agriculture


Journal article


J. Clapp
2021

Semantic Scholar DOI
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Cite

APA   Click to copy
Clapp, J. (2021). Explaining Growing Glyphosate Use: The Political Economy of Herbicide-Dependent Agriculture.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Clapp, J. “Explaining Growing Glyphosate Use: The Political Economy of Herbicide-Dependent Agriculture” (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Clapp, J. Explaining Growing Glyphosate Use: The Political Economy of Herbicide-Dependent Agriculture. 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{j2021a,
  title = {Explaining Growing Glyphosate Use: The Political Economy of Herbicide-Dependent Agriculture},
  year = {2021},
  author = {Clapp, J.}
}

Abstract

Abstract The growing use of chemical herbicides for weed control has become a dominant feature of modern industrial agriculture and a major environmental and health concern in agricultural systems worldwide. This paper seeks to explain how and why glyphosate-based agricultural herbicides have become so entrenched in modern agriculture. It shows that a complex interplay among technological, market, and regulatory developments have encouraged a lock-in of glyphosate linked technologies in agricultural systems. These are: (1) the repurposing of glyphosate for use with genetically modified crops; (2) the rise of the generic glyphosate market, which globalized the chemical’s use and encouraged new agricultural uses; (3) new technologies such as digital agriculture and genome editing that interface with glyphosate use; and (4) growing corporate market power and declining public investment in agricultural research programs that constrained innovation in non-herbicide weed control technologies.