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Networks and Knowledge: The Beginning and End of the Port Commodity Chain, 1703-1860

This chapter is a reprint of the article “Networks and Knowledge: The Beginning and End of the Port Commodity Chain, 1703-1860” published in Business History Review Volume 79 Issue 3 (2005).

Collaboration and Competition in Business Ecosystems

ISBN: 978-1-78190-826-6, eISBN: 978-1-78190-827-3

Publication date: 26 August 2014

Abstract

Diversified trading networks have recently drawn a great deal of attention. In the process, the importance of diversity has perhaps been overemphasized. Using the trade in port wine from Portugal to Britain as an example, this essay attempts to show how a market once dominated by general, diversified traders was taken over by dedicated specialists whose success might almost be measured by the degree to which they rejected diversification to form a dedicated “commodity chain.” The essay suggests that this strategy was better able to handle matters of quality and the specialized knowledge that port wine required. The essay also highlights the question of power in such a chain. Endemic commodity-chain struggles are clearest in the vertical brand war that broke out in the nineteenth century, which, by concentrating power, marked the final stage in the transformation of the trade from network to vertical integration.

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Citation

Duguid, P. (2014), "Networks and Knowledge: The Beginning and End of the Port Commodity Chain, 1703-1860

This chapter is a reprint of the article “Networks and Knowledge: The Beginning and End of the Port Commodity Chain, 1703-1860” published in Business History Review Volume 79 Issue 3 (2005).

", Collaboration and Competition in Business Ecosystems (Advances in Strategic Management, Vol. 30), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 311-349. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0742-3322(2013)0000030013

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2013 Emerald Group Publishing Limited