Global geographies of innovation diffusion: the case of the Australian cattle industry

The geographies and histories of the introduction of cattle breeds to Australia in the period since white settlement are documented as an example of the diffusion of agricultural innovations. Three phases of development are identified: a colonial expansion phase from the late eighteenth to the early...

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Main Authors: Tonts, M., Yarwood, R., Jones, Roy
Format: Journal Article
Published: Wiley-Blackwell 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/21606
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author Tonts, M.
Yarwood, R.
Jones, Roy
author_facet Tonts, M.
Yarwood, R.
Jones, Roy
author_sort Tonts, M.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The geographies and histories of the introduction of cattle breeds to Australia in the period since white settlement are documented as an example of the diffusion of agricultural innovations. Three phases of development are identified: a colonial expansion phase from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century during which a number of primarily British cattle breeds were imported by the colonial settlers; an innovative phase in the mid twentieth century when both governments and private interests sought to produce or import new breeds deemed to be better adapted to Australian environments; and a multifunctional phase in recent decades. In this final phase, government deregulation and new technologies, such as the long distance transport of genetic packages, have facilitated the importation and development of many new cattle breeds in Australia.While this has produced a significant rise in the total number of breeds represented nationally, many recent and historic breeds currently exhibit extremely small numbers and a few generally well-established breeds such as Holstein, Hereford and Angus still dominate the national herd. This study of changing breed types and introductions provides some evidence of post-productivism and of a multifunctional transition in that several cattle breeds favoured by hobby farmers and boutique breeders are now represented, but the aggregate numbers for these breeds remain small and the numbers for several of the traditional (or colonial) breeds are currently in decline. Overall, it is apparent that Australia's cattle industry retains a strongly productivist ethos and that, particularly given the country's very great environmental variation, its levels of breed diversity remain low.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-216062017-09-13T15:59:26Z Global geographies of innovation diffusion: the case of the Australian cattle industry Tonts, M. Yarwood, R. Jones, Roy cattle breeds innovation diffusion Australia multifunctionality productivism The geographies and histories of the introduction of cattle breeds to Australia in the period since white settlement are documented as an example of the diffusion of agricultural innovations. Three phases of development are identified: a colonial expansion phase from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century during which a number of primarily British cattle breeds were imported by the colonial settlers; an innovative phase in the mid twentieth century when both governments and private interests sought to produce or import new breeds deemed to be better adapted to Australian environments; and a multifunctional phase in recent decades. In this final phase, government deregulation and new technologies, such as the long distance transport of genetic packages, have facilitated the importation and development of many new cattle breeds in Australia.While this has produced a significant rise in the total number of breeds represented nationally, many recent and historic breeds currently exhibit extremely small numbers and a few generally well-established breeds such as Holstein, Hereford and Angus still dominate the national herd. This study of changing breed types and introductions provides some evidence of post-productivism and of a multifunctional transition in that several cattle breeds favoured by hobby farmers and boutique breeders are now represented, but the aggregate numbers for these breeds remain small and the numbers for several of the traditional (or colonial) breeds are currently in decline. Overall, it is apparent that Australia's cattle industry retains a strongly productivist ethos and that, particularly given the country's very great environmental variation, its levels of breed diversity remain low. 2010 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/21606 10.1111/j.1475-4959.2009.00331.x Wiley-Blackwell fulltext
spellingShingle cattle breeds
innovation diffusion
Australia
multifunctionality
productivism
Tonts, M.
Yarwood, R.
Jones, Roy
Global geographies of innovation diffusion: the case of the Australian cattle industry
title Global geographies of innovation diffusion: the case of the Australian cattle industry
title_full Global geographies of innovation diffusion: the case of the Australian cattle industry
title_fullStr Global geographies of innovation diffusion: the case of the Australian cattle industry
title_full_unstemmed Global geographies of innovation diffusion: the case of the Australian cattle industry
title_short Global geographies of innovation diffusion: the case of the Australian cattle industry
title_sort global geographies of innovation diffusion: the case of the australian cattle industry
topic cattle breeds
innovation diffusion
Australia
multifunctionality
productivism
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/21606