Fuel-Efficient Stoves for Darfur: The Social Construction of Subsistence Marketplaces in Post-Conflict Settings

13 Pages Posted: 10 Apr 2011 Last revised: 17 Jun 2014

See all articles by Samer Abdelnour

Samer Abdelnour

University of Edinburgh Business School

Oana Branzei

University of Western Ontario

Date Written: August 21, 2010

Abstract

This paper explores the development of market roles and transactions in fuel-efficient stoves in Darfur from 1997 to 2008 as a grounded example of how subsistence markets are socially constructed in post-conflict settings. Using a combination of archival texts, interviews, and real-time discourses by protagonists, this study explains the who, what, why and how of emergent marketplaces by showing how development interventions come to imbue market participants and transactions with socially (re)constructed meanings. The fitful emergence of subsistence marketplaces for fuel-efficient in Darfur is punctuated by development interventions which at times under- or misrepresent market participants and by successes and failures in bringing together trainers, producers, sellers, consumers and users of fuel-efficient stoves. Subsidies and handouts delay and distort the emergence of grassroots demand, choices, and prices; a plurality of competing development interventions re-shape the supply. By the end of 2008, the subsistence market for fuel-efficient stoves catches momentum, engaging over 52% of the Darfuri communities in market transactions for the product. As market participants gain voice and influence they reshape the market to favour mud stoves over metal stoves. Reports by several development organizations suggest that among fuel-efficient stove users, 90% use mud models, and 49% of women who own both mud and metal stoves prefer mud stoves.

Keywords: Subsistence Marketplaces, Critical Discourse Analysis, Development Interventions

JEL Classification: O00, O19, O55

Suggested Citation

Abdelnour, Samer and Branzei, Oana, Fuel-Efficient Stoves for Darfur: The Social Construction of Subsistence Marketplaces in Post-Conflict Settings (August 21, 2010). Journal of Business Research, Vol. 63, No. 6, 2010, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1662980

Samer Abdelnour (Contact Author)

University of Edinburgh Business School ( email )

Oana Branzei

University of Western Ontario ( email )

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Suite 2
London, Ontario N6A 5B8
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