Practices of Third Wave Coffee: A Burundian Producer's Perspective
Publication date
2018
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Abstract
The relationship between coffee quality and sustainability is typically analysed using symbolic quality attributes, not material quality. This article provides a bottom-up perspective of Burundi's current competitive advantage in the global coffee market: material quality. The research agenda was embedded within the operations of a Burundian coffee washing station and describes critical business practices for producing and selling high material quality coffee. We argue that these business practices represent quality governance mechanisms that are significantly different from the exogenous and fixed criteria of sustainability certifications and labels. Such quality governance mechanisms are an important trading trend to recognize and understand in a producing country such as Burundi that is unable to effectively compete in the certified coffee market because of the small size and irregularity of its supply.
Keywords
Burundi, certified coffee, direct trade, specialty coffee, sustainability, Taverne, Business and International Management, Geography, Planning and Development, Strategy and Management, Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law, SDG 12 - Responsible Consumption and Production
Citation
Rosenberg, L, Swilling, M & Vermeulen, W J V 2018, 'Practices of Third Wave Coffee : A Burundian Producer's Perspective', Business Strategy and the Environment, vol. 27, no. 2, pp. 199-214. https://doi.org/10.1002/bse.2010