Economic and Social Diversity in Australia's Cotton-producing Communities

  • Tony Sorensen School of Behavioural, Cognitive and Social Sciences; New England Business School, University of New England
  • Bernice Kotey School of Behavioural, Cognitive and Social Sciences; New England Business School, University of New England
Keywords: diversity of rural settlements, non-agricultural activity, cotton industry, innovative SME’s

Abstract

Australia’s highly profitable cotton industry is geographically constrained to districts in northern New South Wales and Southern Queensland. However, the rural towns servicing the industry are facing unprecedented stress on account of fierce commercial competition between them, many years of drought during the 2000s, technological innovation in cotton production, the chance occurrence of non-agricultural economic opportunities, and even ethnic composition. Our research focuses on the role of innovative small business in overcoming community stress and we have selected a small sample of six local government areas to
examine this link in depth. The selection of a representative sample entailed the classification of cotton communities on the basis of their economic and social profiles and how they had evolved over the inter-census period 2001-06. This analysis surprisingly showed that cotton growing regions are highly differentiated not just at a single point in time (2006), but also in their development trajectories. This considerably complicated the process of sample selection, but also demonstrated the diversity of rural settlement.

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Author Biographies

Tony Sorensen, School of Behavioural, Cognitive and Social Sciences; New England Business School, University of New England

Armidale, Australia. E-mail: tony.sorensen@une.edu.au.

Bernice Kotey, School of Behavioural, Cognitive and Social Sciences; New England Business School, University of New England

Armidale, Australia. E-mail: bkotey@une.edu.au.

References

Hearfield C. and Sorensen A. 2009: Regional Economic Governance: A Technology of Government or Regional Autonomy in New South Wales, Space and Polity, 13 (2), 93-107.

Kotey, B., Sorensen, A and Reavell, R. 2009: Socio-Economic and Environmental Changes Affecting Cotton Catchment Communities, Centre for Applied Research in Social Sciences, University of New England, First Report prepared for the Cotton Catchment Communities CRC for the Project: Innovative Regional Businesses and Options for Economic Growth in Cotton Communities, Project No: 3.02.03.

Sorensen A.D. 1990: Virtuous cycles of growth and vicious cycles of decline: regional economic change in Northern NSW, in D.J. Walmsley (ed.), Change and Adjustment in Northern NSW, Department of Geography and Planning, University of New England, Armidale.

Sorensen, A. 2009: Australian Agricultural R&D and Innovation Systems, paper presented to the annual Tinbergen Conference, Amsterdam, June 15-16.

Sorensen A. and Weinand, H. 1991: Regional well-being in Australia revisited, Australian Geographical Studies, 29(1), 42-70.

Published
2009-06-30
How to Cite
Sorensen T., & Kotey B. (2009). Economic and Social Diversity in Australia’s Cotton-producing Communities. Journal for Geography, 4(1), 117-128. https://doi.org/10.18690/rg.4.1.3155
Section
Scientific Articles