1st Edition
Capitalism, Climate Change, and the Food System in Latin America Processed Diet
Introduction: Capitalism, Climate Change, and the Food System in Latin America Chapter 1. Climate Change and Food Chapter 2. An IPE Approach to Study the Food Sector Chapter 3. Cultural Political Economy of Food Chapter 4. The Expansion of Hegemony Through Consent in Latin America Conclusion
Biography
José Manuel Leal is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Guadalajara, Mexico. His research focuses on transnational climate change governance and the international political economy of climate change. His latest publication includes La reestructuración del poder en las relaciones internacionales. La participación de actores híbridos en la paradiplomacia mexicana: El caso del estado de Jalisco (with Rocío Melendrez, 2025), La brecha democrática en la política climática: La importancia de las interacciones funcionales para abordar problemas complejos (with Adriana Martínez and Daniel Moya, 2025), La paradiplomacia transversal de la transición energética. Perspectivas para México (2025), and previous publications include Transnational City Networks, Global Political Economy, and Climate Governance: C40 in Mexico and Lima (with Matthew Paterson, 2023), and La economización de la gobernanza global climática: Lecciones desde los mercados de carbono (2023).
"In Processed Diet, Leal Garcia gives us a fascinating account of how to think about the restructuring of diets in Latin America in ways that are highly problematic for health, prosperity, and climate change. He shows how traditional diets in the region, integrated into local ecologies and economists, have been progressively transformed towards more globalised, standardised models, through processes of economic integration and cultural hegemony. While we know much about the problematic aspects of industrial food systems, Leal Garcia shows us brilliantly how this has come to become dominant in a region rich in its own agro-ecological history. "
Matthew Paterson, Politcs Department, University of Manchester
"A timely contribution to International Political Economy, this book shows how power circulates through networksand consent beyond the state, shaping food habits and—by extension—climate outcomes. Drawing on lucid cases from Latin America, it advances a persuasive account of hegemony, globalization, and the politics of food-system governance."
Sofía Andrea Meza Mejía, Coordinator, B.A. in International Relations (ITESO) Professor-Researcher






