3 research outputs found
Good governance and social responsibility in the South African wine industry
The paper reviews the institutional structure or strategic framework, the Wine Industry
Transformation Charter and Scorecard, adopted on 31 July 2007, through which good governance and
social responsibility programmes are fostered, implemented and monitored in the South African wine
industry. In other words, the paper outlines how the wine industry seeks to foster social change
through integrated socioeconomic support structures, as based on the Wine Industry Plan (WIP). The
wine charter and scorecard components are a representation of good governance in the industry,
whereas the social capital development approach is the focus of social responsibility programmes in
the wine industry. The seven components of the wine transformation charter are: (i) ownership, (ii)
management/control, (iii) employment equity, (iv) skills development, (v) enterprise development,
(vi) preferential procurement, and (vii) rural development, land reform and poverty alleviation. Five
areas that constitute the programmes of social responsibility are: (i) the responsible alcohol use, (ii)
rural development and poverty alleviation, (iii) security of tenure, (iv) land, and (v) sectoral
determination. The implications for the agri-food sector and conclusions are provided
Good governance and social responsibility in the South African wine industry
Please help us populate SUNScholar with the post print version of this article. It can be e-mailed to: [email protected]
Recommended from our members
Are we there yet? Exploring empowerment at the microscale in the South African wine industry
Empowerment is a standard but ambiguous element of development rhetoric and so, through the socially complex and contested terrain of South Africa, this paper explores its potential to contribute to inclusive development. Investigating micro-level engagements with the national strategy of Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment (B-BBEE) in the South African wine industry highlights the limitations, but also potential, of this single domain approach. However, latent paternalism, entrenched interests and a ‘dislocated blackness’ maintain a complex racial politics that shapes both power relations and the opportunities for transformation within the industry. Nonetheless, while B-BBEE may not, in reality, be broad-based its manifestations are contributing to challenging racist structures and normalising changing attitudes. This paper concludes that, to be transformative, empowerment needs to be re-embedded within South Africa as a multi-scalar, multi-dimensional dialogue and, despite the continuation of structural constraints, positions the local as a critical scale at which to initiate broader social change