Prologue
1. Ghana is Cocoa
2. Cocoa Wars
3. Child Labour
4. Follow the Money
5. From Bean to Bar
6. Fairtrade Myths and Reality
7. Trading Games
8. Building a Sustainable Future
Epilogue
Notes
Index
Provocative and eye-opening, Chocolate Nations exposes the true story of how the treat we love makes it on to our supermarket shelves.
Orla Ryan works for the Financial Times in London. She lived in Africa for more than four years, first in Uganda, and then in Ghana, where she worked for Reuters.
A captivating read, painting a lively picture of the West African
cocoa trade from a variety of perspectives.
*Daniel Balint Kurti, Global Witness*
Arresting and provocative. The author’s interviews with labourers
movingly illuminate the struggles that lie behind an icon of
western indulgence.
*Financial Times*
Presents the tragic and shocking detail behind the world's
favourite confectionery.
*New Agriculturist*
I gave up eating chocolate years ago after seeing at first hand the
exploitation that surrounds its production in Africa. Since then,
endless panaceas and fair trading schemes have failed to improve
the lot of the farmers. It was about time a book like this was
written.
*Stephen Chan OBE, author of The End of Certainty*
Paints a disturbing and subtle picture of an industry few chocolate
consumers think about.
*Sydney Morning Herald*
A fascinating account of the struggles of cocoa producers in West
Africa, almost all of them smallholders, and what it takes to turn
a crop of cocoa into a warehouse full of Ferrero Rocher.
*The Guardian*
That Mmmmoment when our lips meet the meltilicious chocolate bar
we've been waiting for all day ... well, it could be the last bite
we take of it that tastes right after reading this exposé of the
cocoa industry. "Fair trade" is a great feelgood advertising line,
but it is often a contradiction in terms. Not much profit trickles
down from the shelves of our shops to the farmers and child labour
(in reality, trafficked or slave labour, Ryan says) of Ghana and
Ivory Coast whose poverty is covered up by weasel words from trade
associations and financial interests glibly defending exploitation
and profiteering.
*The Times*
A courageous and thoughtful account of a murky industry.
*Times Literary Supplement*
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