“<i>The Government of Beans</i> is an exhilarating read. Kregg Hetherington offers a brilliant theorization of agripolitics built up from the ground up through close observation of how dreams, schemes, laws and a host of small things (beans, trucks, measuring sticks, hedges, insects, traffic jams) transform lives and create new worlds. Anyone tempted by the idea that governing the Anthropocene means finding the right policy, or the right technology, or even the right kind of state should read this book.” - Tania Murray Li, author of (Land's End: Capitalist Relations on an Indigenous Frontier) “Stimulating, thought-provoking, and beautifully written, <i>The Government of Beans</i> explores what may be politically possible in the face of the overwhelming power of agribusiness and an ineffective and frequently corrupt government. This important and creative book brings histories, dreams, hopes, horrors, ambivalences, and practices to light.” - John Law, author of (After Method: Mess in Social Science Research) “This well-written and important book is simultaneously a political and economic history of Paraguay, particularly its eastern part, and a depiction of a short historical period of radical politics on the part of the state.” - Annika Rabo (Anthropology Book Forum) “Hetherington’s book <i>The Government of Beans</i> offers a riveting (yes, riveting) account of the expansion of agroindustry and soy production in [Paraguay].... [His] book offers a particularly timely cautionary tale about the possibilities and limits of government....” - María Elena García (Public Books) “<i>The Government of Beans</i> offers a cautionary tale about the risks of using the regulatory instruments of the state to limit the violence of the state.... [It] offer[s] a refined interdisciplinary lens to study the intricate workings of soy and power in South America.” - Daniela A. Marini (AAG Review of Books) “Recent state-society research in rural Argentina has produced important works on the politics of the GM soy boom.... Profoundly ethnographic and conceptually sophisticated, <i>The Government of Beans</i> is an excellent contribution to this literature from a Paraguayan perspective. This fine study deserves a wide interdisciplinary readership.” - Ezquerro-Cañete (Journal of Peasant Studies)
Introduction. Governing the Anthropocene 1
Part I. A Cast of Characters 19
1. The Accidental Monocrop 23
2. Killer Soy 32
3. The Absent State 43
4. The Living Barrier 53
5. The Plant Health Service 62
6. The Vast Tofu Conspiracy 70
Part II. An Experiment in Government 81
7. Capturing the Civil Service 85
8. Citizen Participation 96
9. Regulation by Denunciation 106
10. Citation, Sample, and Parallel States 120
11. Measurement as Tactical Sovereignty 130
12. A Massacre Where the Army Used to Be 144
Part III. Agribiopolitics 157
13. Plant Health and Human Health 163
14. A Philosophy of Life 174
15. Cotton, Welfare, and Genocide 184
16. Immunizing Welfare 194
17. Dummy Huts and the Labor of Killing 203
Conclusion. Remains of Experiments Past 216
Notes 223
Bibliography 257
Index 277