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12 - How to Count Vanilla

Transparency Trade-Offs in Organic Certification

from Part IV - Truth

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2026

Filipe Calvão
Affiliation:
Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva
Matthieu Bolay
Affiliation:
University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland
Elizabeth Ferry
Affiliation:
Brandeis University, Massachusetts

Summary

Organic certification programs aim to promote transparent economic, environmental, and social trade relationships as part of their social mission. Yet, these programs often produce forms of knowledge and accountability that, while more transparent for some groups, are less transparent for others. With a focus on the vanilla supply chain in Madagascar, I ethnographically examine interactions between smallholder vanilla farmers and organic certifying agents. I note how the organic certification process privileges certain practices as transparent, and thus desirable. These include written, quantifiable, and formalized representations of vanilla fields. This focus ignores or undermines local forms of transparency, which often rely on spoken, indirect, and informal market mechanisms. The forms of transparency favored by certification projects have economic consequences, as they open spaces for additional external actors – including certification agencies themselves – to capture profit and value from the vanilla market.

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