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Stefano Ponte

Professor

Emner
Værdikæde Bæredygtighed Klima Miljø

Primary research areas

In­ter­na­tion­al polit­ic­al eco­nomy
I study power re­la­tions in the al­loc­a­tion of scarce re­sources across the globe and their dis­tri­bu­tion­al ef­fects - es­pe­cially between the Glob­al North and the Glob­al South
Glob­al value chains
I ex­am­ine glob­al value chains (es­pe­cially in ag­ri­cul­ture and food) from pro­duc­tion of con­sump­tion and as­sess the dy­nam­ics of value cre­ation, cap­ture and re­dis­tri­bu­tion among dif­fer­ent act­ors
Sustain­ability and en­vir­on­ment­al gov­ernance
I ana­lyse the gov­ernance of sustain­ability along glob­al value chains and es­pe­cially how busi­ness lever­ages en­vir­on­ment­al man­age­ment for cap­it­al ac­cu­mu­la­tion

I un­veil power re­la­tions in the con­duct of busi­ness and call out the in­equal­it­ies that arise as a res­ult

I look for the underlying problems before thinking of solutions    

I am one of the scholars who built the theoretical and analytical foundations of global value chain analysis, especially in relation to various typologies of value chain governance, environmental upgrading trajectories for Global South actors, the theorization of power in value chains, and typologies of inequality. 

I am known particularly for theoretical and empirical work that unpacks the normative foundations of structural power in global value chains. I examine how environmental, conservation and broader sustainability issues are leveraged by corporate actors for capital accumulation and the material and normative contestations that play around these dynamics.  Empirically, I work mostly on agro-food value chains (including coffee, wine, seafood, biofuels) that have significant North-South flows. 

27. november 2025

Value Struggles and Place

Looking at Tradition, Authenticity, and Heritage Through the Wine Glass

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august 2025

Value Struggles

Looking at Capitalism Through the Wine Glass

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9. juni 2025

Due Diligence Regulation and Sustainability Governance in Value Chains

Lessons From the South African Wine Sector

Matthew Alford

Reena Das Nair

Margareet Visser

Ste­fa­no Po­n­te, Professor

Shingie Chisoro

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Recent research projects

En­vir­on­ment­al Mari­time Gov­ernance in Kenya: Policy, Prac­tice and Pro­spects for the Abate­ment of ship­ping Air Emis­sions (EMG-K) (co-in­vest­ig­at­or; PI: René Taud­al Poulsen)

EMG-K stud­ies: 1) Kenya’s en­gage­ment in policy mak­ing in the United Na­tion’s In­ter­na­tion­al Mari­time Or­gan­iz­a­tion (IMO), which reg­u­lates ship­ping’s air emis­sions via the MAR­POL Con­ven­tion; and 2) the im­ple­ment­a­tion and en­force­ment of IMO MAR­POL Con­ven­tion’s An­nex VI in Kenyan ports.

Mari­time emis­sions abate­ment has been said to de­pend on a glob­al and uni­form im­ple­ment­a­tion of reg­u­lat­ory meas­ures as well as strong en­force­ment. This is a par­tic­u­lar chal­lenge in the ship­ping in­dustry with footloose and glob­al op­er­a­tions.

The Para­doxes of Cli­mate-Smart Cof­fee (PAC­SMAC) (co-in­vest­ig­at­or; PI: Kristjan Jes­per­sen)

PAC­SMAC ad­dresses sus­tain­able de­vel­op­ment and cli­mate change by study­ing pro­spects for cli­mate-smart cof­fee us­ing a mul­tidiscip­lin­ary ap­proach. Fa­cing in­creas­ing tem­per­at­ures and pre­cip­it­a­tion changes, farm­ers are test­ing new plant­ing tech­niques and ge­net­ic vari­etals. PAC­SMAC ex­plores these activ­it­ies and how power dy­nam­ics across Glob­al Value Chains (GVCs) af­fect op­por­tun­it­ies for and be­ne­fits from cli­mate ad­apt­a­tion, ad­dress­ing three ques­tions:

-How does cli­mate change ad­apt­a­tion af­fect the gov­ernance of Ethiopia and Tan­zania’s cof­fee value chains?
-How does ad­apt­a­tion af­fect the dis­tri­bu­tion of value along the chain, up­grad­ing op­por­tun­it­ies and farm­er live­li­hoods?
-How does ad­apt­a­tion re­shape cof­fee pro­duc­tion and forest cov­er geo­graph­ies?

Our find­ings identi­fy ways cli­mate-smart ag­ri­cul­ture can sup­port live­li­hoods and cli­mate mit­ig­a­tion and ad­apt­a­tion
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Power and In­equal­ity in Glob­al Pro­duc­tion Sys­tems’ (PIPS) (PI)

The glob­al­iz­a­tion of pro­duc­tion has yiel­ded new win­ners and losers with­in and across na­tions. Glob­al Value Chain (GVC) schol­ar­ship in eco­nom­ic so­ci­ology and eco­nom­ic geo­graphy shows that the par­ti­cip­a­tion of Glob­al South act­ors in GVCs has not led to sig­ni­fic­ant in­creases in value ad­di­tion with­in these coun­tries.

As in­equal­ity in the dis­tri­bu­tion of value ad­ded between Glob­al South and Glob­al North per­sists, we need more know­ledge on how lead firms ex­er­cise power over their sup­pli­ers and what kinds and com­bin­a­tions of power they yield. Re­search has fo­cused on asym­met­ries in bar­gain­ing power without ex­amin­ing how oth­er forms, such as in­sti­tu­tion­al, demon­strat­ive and con­sti­tu­tion­al power, un­der­pin or chal­lenge ex­ist­ing bar­gain­ing power im­bal­ances over time.

To ad­dress these lim­it­a­tions, PIPS de­vel­ops a new the­ory of power in GPSs from a North-South per­spect­ive and provides new point­ers for pub­lic au­thor­it­ies and so­cial move­ments on how to ad­dress in­equal­ity.

Outside activities

Venice Man­age­ment School. Cá Fo­scari Uni­ver­sity, Venice , 2025 - 2025

Vis­it­ing Pro­fess­or

Uni­ver­sity of Jo­han­nes­burg, CCRED , 2020 - 2024

Dis­tin­guished Vis­it­ing Pro­fess­or

De­part­ment of Cul­tures, Polit­ics and So­ci­ety, Uni­ver­sity of Torino , 2023 - 2024

Vis­it­ing Pro­fess­or

De­part­ment of Eco­nom­ics and Man­age­ment, Uni­ver­sity of Padova , 2020 - 2021

Vis­it­ing Pro­fess­or