“Fine Flavor” Chocolate Standards can offer a sweet deal for Smallholder Farmers
- From
-
Published on
16.02.23
- Impact Area

Cacao (the key ingredient of chocolate, also known as cocoa) is essential to the livelihoods of 40–50 million people globally, including over 5 million smallholders in tropical, developing countries.
In the paper “Who Defines Fine Chocolate? The Construction of Global Cocoa Quality Standards from Latin America” published in The International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food, researchers put forth that the ongoing debates over the content of cacao standards and their future governance structure reflect broader disputes over who will profit from or pay the most for superior quality cocoa, which is the fastest growing segment of the global cocoa market.
Related news
-
SHiFT at Nutrition 2024
CGIAR Initiative on Sustainable Healthy Diets27.06.24-
Nutrition, health & food security
Researchers from the CGIAR Research Initiative on Sustainable Healthy Diets through Food Systems Tra…
Read more -
-
Leveraging the role of MSMEs in food systems transformation: Insights from fruit and vegetable chain studies across five countries
CGIAR Initiative on Sustainable Healthy Diets27.06.24-
Nutrition, health & food security
Midstream micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) can help transform our food systems by linkin…
Read more -
-
Role of MSMEs in Viet Nam’s food environments
CGIAR Initiative on Sustainable Healthy Diets26.06.24-
Nutrition, health & food security
In 2023, researchers from the CGIAR Research Initiative on Sustainable Healthy Diets through Food Sy…
Read more -