空间化全球化:海产品行业中的“质量地理学”

Spatializing Globalization: A “Geography of Quality” in the Seafood Industry

Economic Geography · 2003
被引 83 · 同刊同年前 7%
人大 A-ABS 4

中文导读

研究了全球海产品行业中产品质量如何塑造空间差异和贸易格局,以鱼糜产业为例,说明质量定义影响供应链和区域产业发展。

Abstract

Abstract: The sociospatial structure of global industries may be characterized by difference and plurality as much as by the coordination of practices over space. One important factor that shapes these dynamics in contemporary food industries is the quality of products. Challenging recent perspectives that define quality as an alternative to global, industrial forms of production, this analysis finds that quality is also important for industrial food production and for the global geography of the surimi seafood industry. Surimi, a fish paste used in a wide assortment of products, such as fish cakes and imitation crab, was once exclusively Japanese. Now, this industry is global in scope, with production and consumption encompassing sites across Asia, the Americas, and Europe. Interactions among types of products, market differences, processing strategies, and the characteristics of fish form fluid definitions of product quality that shape patterns of supply and demand within the global industry. Terming these spatial interactions a “geography of quality,” this article shows that differences in how quality is constructed influence the development of dynamic transnational trade patterns and new regional industries in each market. This changing geography of quality provides insight into the creation and maintenance of a geographically differentiated yet still global‐scale industry. The geography of quality in this industry is such that relative dis‐integration between different commodity chains characterizes the movement toward global‐scale production and consumption.

全球产业空间结构质量地理鱼糜产业