Economic Geography
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Economic and social geography
see also multi-regional firms
Mariner’s baseball team 193 market power perspective 146 market speculation 85 market states 223 Marx, Karl 13, 137, 175–6 Marxian political economy 13–14, 49–50, 51, 175–6 influence on economic geography 96–8, 100–1, 175 revival 95–6 Marxism 35–6 Marxist crisis theory 96 masculinity 40–1 Massey, Doreen 50, 246 mental labour 143 meso-economic approach 97, 98 methodological individualism 53 microfoundations 16 migrant women 43 migration 236, 237 military-industrial complex, geography of 98–100 mobility, workplace 237, 241–2 monopolistic competition 60, 61, 63 morphogenesis 13, 16 MRIO model 189 multinational corporations 59 multi-regional firms corporate dynamics and 201–3 policy directions 203–4 research agenda 204–5 role in regional economies 198–9, 203 National Bureau for Economic Research (NBER) 114–15 nation-state 83, 85, 86, 223 emergence 85 natural science, limitations 94 nature 55, 129 Nelson, Richard 245 neoliberalism 14, 54, 159, 222, 230 fight against 72 networks 15, 147, 177, 179, 231 personal and social 146 proliferation 223 New Deal 215, 238 new economic geography 200, 247, 248 new economy 59, 121 as rhetorical phenomenon 67 new growth theory 16 new imperialism 222–3 economic geography for see Post-Cultural-Turn Economic Geography new industrial state 83 new regional geography 177 new regionalism 230 new servant class 41 non-earnings income 191 non-employment 239–40 normative turn 60 North American Service Industries Research Network (NASIRN) 119 offshoring 121, 142–3, 242, 249 opportunity structures 237–8 outsourcing 121, 242, 246, 249 path dependence 91, 169 patriarchy 15 PCTEG see Post-Cultural-Turn Economic Geography pecuniary externalities 63, 65, 73 256 Index people climate, business climate vs 182 personal debt 222 personalism 151 personal networks 146 philosophical domains 18 place importance 15, 16, 26 space and 128 place competition 163–4 place politics, globalization and 229 policy, evidence-based 238 policy analysis 213 policy discourse 208–17 confronting economics 210–11 dominance of economists 210, 213–14 engagement of geographers 209–10, 215–16, 249 policy instruments 215 policy levers 241 policy research regional competitiveness and 170–1 skills 208, 213 policy turn 60 political ecology 128, 129, 133 political economy cultural economy and 52 global 149 see also Marxian political economy political voluntarism 69 Porter, Michael 159, 164, 230 on clusters 181 on competitive advantage 162, 169, 178 competitive strategies definition 187–8 positivism 13, 17, 174, 224 post-autistic economics 21 Post-Cultural-Turn Economic Geography (PCTEG) 221 anti-foundationalism 225 loss of empirical substance 228 treatment of economics 227–8 treatment of geography 228–30 post-Fordism 14, 177 postmodernism 224 post-structuralism 15, 224, 226 poverty 214–15, 223 Pred, Allan 106 producer services 114–15, 118–19, 120, 144 research 187–8, 190 Producer Services Working Party (PSWP) 118, 119 product differentiation 61 production focus on 25 geography of 91, 105 social relations of 83 production networks global 130, 246 management 132 production systems 66 productive consumption 113 product life-cycle hypothesis 146 Public Service Agreement targets 238 Puget Sound Region 118 qualitative methods, shift to 234–5 quantitative analysis 72 quantitative revolution 11, 27, 28, 182, 186 effect on geography’s appeal 2 tools developed by 175 R&D 140, 142, 244, 246, 248 race theory 107 racism 215 rank-size rule 16 rational individual 35 realist approach 176 recycling, product 130 reflexivity 34 regeneration 230 region difficulty in defining 162 as motor of economic activity 64 regional absolute advantages 167 regional benchmarking 160, 170–1 regional competitiveness assessment importance 160–1 as contentious concept 162–3 definition 165 as evolutionary process 168–70 policy research and 170–1 primary sources 166 skills as key driver 240 thinking about 163–8 Index 257 regional development influential academics 245 key ideas 244 regional development agencies 204 Regional Economic Architecture 240 regional external economies 166–7, 169 regional fundamentals 166, 167 regional geography, new 177 regional growth 165 roads to capitalism approach 107 regional innovation systems (RIS) 64, 179–80 regional institutionalization 163 regional science 58, 96, 186, 201, 247 enervation after mid-1970s 69 Regional Skills Partnerships 239 region-based learning 64, 179–80, 182 regulationist approach 51 regulation theory 14, 35 relationality 229 relational space 182 relational turn 60 relative factor endowments 166 repeat investment 203, 205 reproduction 26 reputational capital 131 research and development (R&D) 140, 142, 244, 246, 248 research methods 186–95 exploratory 188–9 framed by research questions 187–8 insights from unexpected results 192–3 IT impact 191–2 with secondary data 190–1 transfer of knowledge to students 194 underlaid by theory or models 189–90 value of research to applied research community 193–4 RESER 119, 191 resource environment 168 resources 129–30 Ricardian comparative advantage theory 166 risk dispersal 86 management 87–8, 90 Robinson, Joan 103 RoHS directive 126, 130, 134 Sachs, Geoffrey 17 San Francisco Bay Area 104, 106–9 Sauer, Carl 109 Schwarzenegger, Arnold 107 Scotland, economy 203 second best, theory of 228 service multinational enterprise 115 services 25, 112–21 consumer 114, 120 definition 116, 140 distinction from goods 112–13 economic geographers and 116–20 innovation by 120 knowledge-intensive business 120 non-geographers’ research role 114–16 producer 114–15, 118–19, 120, 144 research 187–8, 190 relocation 141 research 246 sub-classes 120 tradability of output 118 value 117 service sector work 37, 39 changing nature 120 global geography 140–3 spatial redistribution 120 shipping 137–8 Silicon Valley 104, 108, 238 Singapore, TNCs 148 SMEs 199 Smith, Adam 137 social actors 147–8 social capital 177, 179 social class, 71 97, 106 socialism 13 social issues, silence of geographers on 214 social networks 146 social order 107 258 Index social relevance 174, 175, 182 social welfare, responsibility for 89 software services 141–2 South Korea, TNCs 148 space accumulation dynamics and 72 and place 128 relational 182 as trumping economic theory 13, 14 spatial access 26 spatial analysis 173, 174 spatial equilibria 16 spatial fix 96 spatial linkage patterns 189 spatial mismatch 237 spatial mobility 237 spatial science 35, 48 state power 105 STEP group 180, 183 stock market bubble 87, 89, 142 structural adjustment 17 structural determinism 50 structuralism 17 structuration, theory of 50 structure-agency formulation 71 suburbanization 96, 104 sunbelt phenomenon 98–9 supply chains 131, 132, 133 sweat-shops 131, 136 systems integration 246 Taiwan, TNCs 148 tax-raising capacity 86 teaching, of economic geography 30–1 technical change, economic role 105 technological change 131, 132 technology 244–9 as carrier of history 169 technology-led growth 64 technology transfer 133 telecommunications 139–40 telemedicine 142 teleworking 121 territorial structure geography 175 textualism 226 theory, interpretation vs 19, 20–1 Third World multinationals 145, 147 Thomas, Morgan 245, 246 TMT bubble 87, 89, 142 totalization 57 trade unions 96–7 trading zones 21 transaction cost economics 146, 147 transnational corporations (TNCs) 145 Download 3.2 Kb. 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