Food Regimes Revisited: A New Zealand Perspective

‘Food Regimes’ was coined by Friedmann and McMichael in 1989 and provided a organising framework for a considerable amount of Australian and New Zealand research during a period of economic restructuring and ‘deregulation’. Subsequently Food regimes were overtaken by other perspectives in New Zeala...

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Main Author: Michael Roche
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Urbanistični inštitut RS 2012-01-01
Series:Urbani Izziv
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urbani-izziv.uirs.si/Portals/uizziv/papers/urbani-izziv-en-2012-23-supplement-2-005.pdf
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author Michael Roche
author_facet Michael Roche
author_sort Michael Roche
collection DOAJ
description ‘Food Regimes’ was coined by Friedmann and McMichael in 1989 and provided a organising framework for a considerable amount of Australian and New Zealand research during a period of economic restructuring and ‘deregulation’. Subsequently Food regimes were overtaken by other perspectives in New Zealand and elsewhere including an interest in commodity productions chains, regulation, post-productivist landscapes, and post structural political economy. More recently McMichael has reintroduced Food Regimes to his analysis. The paper will compare and contrast McMichael’s earlier and more recent engagements with Food Regimes. The export meat, the dairy, and pip fruit industries of Zealand it will be used to illustrate points about the timing, boundaries and margins as well as the transformation of Food Regimes. Finally the paper will attempt to connect the more recent focus on commodity chain analysis and post productivist landscapes with McMichael’s renewed interest in food Regimes.
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spelling doaj.art-3217ce16c43f43fc9eb2af70871f2df52022-12-21T23:33:58ZengUrbanistični inštitut RSUrbani Izziv0353-64831855-83992012-01-0123supplement 2s62s75Food Regimes Revisited: A New Zealand PerspectiveMichael Roche‘Food Regimes’ was coined by Friedmann and McMichael in 1989 and provided a organising framework for a considerable amount of Australian and New Zealand research during a period of economic restructuring and ‘deregulation’. Subsequently Food regimes were overtaken by other perspectives in New Zealand and elsewhere including an interest in commodity productions chains, regulation, post-productivist landscapes, and post structural political economy. More recently McMichael has reintroduced Food Regimes to his analysis. The paper will compare and contrast McMichael’s earlier and more recent engagements with Food Regimes. The export meat, the dairy, and pip fruit industries of Zealand it will be used to illustrate points about the timing, boundaries and margins as well as the transformation of Food Regimes. Finally the paper will attempt to connect the more recent focus on commodity chain analysis and post productivist landscapes with McMichael’s renewed interest in food Regimes.http://urbani-izziv.uirs.si/Portals/uizziv/papers/urbani-izziv-en-2012-23-supplement-2-005.pdffood regimesNew Zealandagri-food systems
spellingShingle Michael Roche
Food Regimes Revisited: A New Zealand Perspective
Urbani Izziv
food regimes
New Zealand
agri-food systems
title Food Regimes Revisited: A New Zealand Perspective
title_full Food Regimes Revisited: A New Zealand Perspective
title_fullStr Food Regimes Revisited: A New Zealand Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Food Regimes Revisited: A New Zealand Perspective
title_short Food Regimes Revisited: A New Zealand Perspective
title_sort food regimes revisited a new zealand perspective
topic food regimes
New Zealand
agri-food systems
url http://urbani-izziv.uirs.si/Portals/uizziv/papers/urbani-izziv-en-2012-23-supplement-2-005.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT michaelroche foodregimesrevisitedanewzealandperspective