Economic Geography
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Economic and social geography
Economic geography as (regional) contexts
175 which the central works on the critique of the political economy (Grundrisse and Capital) were written), implying that the work of the different phases cannot be regarded as identical theoretical projects; (b) logic and history referring to the different levels of abstraction in Marxist theory (i.e. theories about the logic and laws of motion of capital found in Capital vs. studies of concrete social forma- tions). In the studies of technological change this differentiation underlines the interrelation between the (exchange) value dimension (economy) and the material (use value) dimension (technology), implying that the capitalist production process is a valorization as well as a labour process, where the valorization process subsumes that labour process (Asheim 1985). This makes simplistic explanations of, for exam- ple, locational changes deduced from changes in the valorization process impos- sible, and establishes studies of concrete social formations as a specific level of analyses in a Marxist theoretical approach. Also this alternative approach empha- sizes that Marx gave up the paradigm of necessity in his political-economical works. This means that the logic of capital must be interpreted as tendencies (i.e. necessary, internal relations of the capitalist mode of production), which implies that it is not a question of things being predetermined, but only determined by the tendencies (structures) whose realization are dependent on contingently related conditions. In many ways this approach provides answers to most of the criticism Marxism was exposed to, for example, in the debate in Environment and Planning D: Society and Space in 1987, which represented the ending of the hegemonic position of Marxist economic geography. This non-deductive and non-reductionist approach represented some serious methodological challenges, which could not easily be answered by looking for methodological guidelines in Marx’ own writings. Beyond referring to the ‘two- route strategy’ from the material-concrete to the theoretical-abstract, and from the abstract to the concrete, there is not much else. 4 In this situation the intro- duction of a ‘realist’ approach (Sayer 1992 (1 st ed, 1984)) was extremely helpful. First, the distinction of realism between abstract and concrete research enables the opposition between nomothetic and idiographic approaches to be transcended (Asheim and Haraldsen 1991); second, it elucidates the relation between the levels of abstraction in Marx’ political economy in a non-reductionist way by explicitly stating that one strata (in the stratification of the world) cannot be reduced to the next as well as emphasizing that ‘concrete intensive research’ is one specific type of research; and third, it solves the problem of which level of abstraction space can be theorized as ‘concrete research’ is the level where space – as a property of an object and, thus, analytically inseparable from the object as such – represents an explanatory factor. Sayer underlines that ‘even though concrete studies may not be interested in spatial form per se, it must be taken into account if the contingencies of the concrete and the differences they make to outcomes are to be understood’ (Sayer 1992: 150). This is consistent with an understanding of geographical analyses as contextual, as well as with positioning geography as basically a synthetic discipline. According to Sayer, ‘the “fetishization of space” consists in attributing to “pure space” what is due to causal powers of the particular objects constituting it. In reaction to this, some proponents of the 176 Bjørn T. Asheim relative concept of space have made the converse mistake of supposing that space is wholly reducible to the constituent objects, whereupon it becomes impossible to see how space make a difference, in any sense’ (Sayer 1992: 148). 5 The consequences for (economic) geography of some (Marxist) geographers reducing space to its constituent objects was also raised by Doreen Massey, who – based on her empirical analyses of the regional consequences of industrial restruc- turing (Massey 1984) reflected upon the radical critique of the 1970s – and argued that ‘“geography” was underestimated; it was underestimated as distance, and it was underestimated in terms of local variation and uniqueness’ (Massey 1985: 12). This and similar reactions promoted what was called the ‘new’ regional geography approach, which, in my mind, came very close to solving the prob- lems of geography basically being a synthetic discipline (‘regional geography’) but with the same theoretical ambitions as other social sciences (‘new’), by applying a realist approach of combining abstract and concrete types of research produc- ing theoretical informed case studies as contextual analyses providing causal explanations through retroduction. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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