Economic Geography
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Economic and social geography
see also regional competitiveness
competitive strategies 187–8 concrete research 176 Confucian heritage and culture 149–50 constituencies 97 consumer, as factor of production 114 consumer desire 39 consumer services 114, 120 consumption 89 containerization 138 contestation 97 contingencies 177 convergence school 149 coordinated economies 180 core-periphery pattern 61 corporate dynamics, multi-regional firms and 201–3 corporate interviews 98 corporate restructuring 84–5, 96 creative class 183, 247–8 creativity 217 Cronon, William 107 cultural economy, political economy and 52 cultural essentialism 150 cultural geography 70 cultural industries 191, 230 cultural turn 14–15, 51–2, 53, 60, 67–9 initiation 147 as new economic geography 200 culture 53, 65–6 causal powers 68 Confucian 149–50 economy and 66, 69 financial markets and 89 spatial boundedness 153 debt, personal 221 decision-making, cognitive ability and 89 deconstructionism 229 defence conversion 99–100 deindustrialization 37, 115 democracy, representative 216 demographic change 241 determinism 71, 73 development 72 see also regional development; urban development development coalitions 182 Dicken, Peter 245 difference commodification 222–3 geographies of 34 digitization 142 252 Index disaggregation 235 disclosure 90 distance, death of 248 divergence school 149 divergent capitalisms 149 domestic labour 41–2 dynamic adaptive capability 168 eclectic framework of international production 146 ecological economics 133 introductory texts 201 ecological modernization 129 economic geographers as agents of change 1 geographical economists vs 19–20, 21 economic geography approaches and methods 27–30 see also research methods audiences 30 definition 22 domain 25–7 importance 230–31 minus economics 227–8 new 200, 247, 248 re-synthesis 70–2 teaching 30–1 turbulence 59 see also environmental economic geography; Post-Cultural-Turn Economic Geography economic impact studies 189–90 economic landscape, dynamics of 72 economic man 28 economics geography vs 19–20, 21 interaction with 3, 247 limitations 94 post-autistic 21 economy culture and 66, 69 definition 52 environment and 55, 129–30 problematization 52–3 ecotopian landscapes 108 efficient markets hypothesis 86, 87, 89 embeddedness, socio-spatial 51, 147, 167, 235 embodied interactive work 38–40 empirical turn 60 empiricism from empirics to 228 shift to theory from 235 employment access to 28–9, 32 from quantity to quality 240 from unemployment to non- employment 239–40 gender and 42, 235–6 as measure of economic growth 246 research 246–7 see also labour markets end-market regulation 130 energy and materials efficiency 131, 133 entrepreneurship 246, 247 research questions 248–9 entries, of sites 201–2 environment behaviour and 89 economy and 55, 129–30 environmental economic geography 126–34 activities 131–4 history 128–31 environmental regulation 130, 132 environmental supply chain management 131, 132 ethnographic techniques 98 European Research Network on Services and Space (RESER) 119, 191 European Union (EU), economic potential realization 160 eventuation 67 evolutionary economics 168, 245, 247 evolutionary theory 51, 168–9 exits, of sites 202 external economies, localized 166–7, 169, 178 family, in Asian business 148 FDI 133, 145, 147 feminist economic geography 15–16, 34–43, 127 feminist geographers 26 feminist theory 34 Index 253 finance geography 83–91 practice 87–8 principles 86–7, 88 research programme 88–90 finance capital 127 financial markets culture and 89 distrust of 85 globalization and 85 flexibility, in labour markets 242 flexibility thesis 190 flexible specialization theory 105, 146–7 Fordism 14, 177 foreign direct investment (FDI) 133, 145, 147 Frameworks for Regional Employment and Skills Action (FRESA) 239 GEM 247, 248 gender 16 employment and 42, 235–6 gender relations 36 geographical economics 60–5 core model see Krugman model geographers’ reception 61–2 as new economic geography 200 geographical economists 16–17 economic geographers vs 19–20, 21 geographical industrialization 105 geography as chorology 173, 174 as context 173 economics vs 19–20, 21 of enterprise 200 human 173, 200 hybridity 58 strengths and weaknesses of geographical analysis 247–8 geo-historical materialism 35, 50 GIS 248 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) 247, 248 global environmental change, human dimensions 129 global financial flows 90 globalization 136, 143 financial markets and 85 place politics and 229 policy implications 153 research needs 151–2 globalizing Asian capitalism 146, 148–51 research needs 152 global production networks 130, 246 global work force 137 goods, distinction from services 112–13 Google 244, 246 greening of industry 127–8, 131–3 growth technology-led 64 Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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