American Association of Geographers American Association of Geographers
2007 Annual Meeting, San Francisco, California Online Program
Abstract Title:
'Regional Dynamics in the Globalising Wine Industry: The Case of Marlborough, New Zealand'

is part of the Paper Session:
Wine Economy from the Global to the Local

scheduled on Wednesday, 4/18/07 at 10:00 AM.

Author(s):
David J Hayward* - University of Auckland
Nicolas Lewis - University of Auckland

Abstract:
The rapid expansion of the New Zealand wine industry has rested largely on a specific wine commodity form, Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc. Global demand has provided the impetus for substantial development at the regional level, an increasingly complex industry structure, and for the intrusion of international capital. This paper explores the contests and relations within the industry through commodity chains analysis, wherein recent developments are mapped onto specific nodes in the production sequence. As a result the contemporary situation may be explained through overlapping organizational and geographic framings of these relations: producer versus buyer-driven dynamics; regional-national and global interests; and inter- and intra-corporate strategies. The commercial contest for control of the region-varietal commodity reveals some paradoxical outcomes in which the region is reaffirmed as a site of investment in an evidently globalised industry, and the significance of who controls what fraction of the value chain is reasserted.

Keywords:

Wine Industry New Zealand


(52) 2007 Annual Meeting, San Francisco, California