Economic Geography
Thinking back, thinking ahead
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Economic and social geography
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Thinking back, thinking ahead Some questions for economic geographers Susan Hanson This book is about change: How has economic geography been changing over the past 30 years and how might it continue to change? What are the ideas and problems that have energized us as students, teachers, scholars, and practitioners of economic geography? How have the ideas and problems themselves changed (or not), and, for those questions that have persisted, how has our thinking about them changed? How can this look to the past inform the future? Moreover, why should tomorrow’s economic geographers care about what they may view as ancient history – the shaping of the discipline 30 or 40 years ago? I’m frequently asked to review for potential publication manuscripts in which the authors cite no literature whatsoever written before the dawn of the twenty-first century; others may reach as far back as 1990! As a result, such authors erroneously claim to be the first to examine x or y, they follow some of the same blind alleys visited by previous generations, and they are unable to relate their own findings to those of earlier studies and thereby build a body of scholarship on a set of questions. As we draw upon the past to envision the future, I pose four questions in this chapter: (1) What will be the domain of economic geography, or put another way, what will count as economic geography? (2) What approaches and methods will we use? (3) What audiences will we seek to address? (4) What and how will we teach? My aim is not to provide tidy answers to these closely linked questions but rather, by thinking about each question in light of changes in economic geo- graphy over the previous several decades, to spur reflection about future directions for the field. I would also like to provoke thought about how we geographers might think constructively about the changes to come. The only part of the future we can be certain of is the part that concerns change (we know we can count on change), but how will we shape and respond to these inevitable changes? I have seen how, over the past 40 years, geographers have managed change primarily by caricaturing, deriding, denigrating, and rejecting what has gone before and setting it in complete opposition to the preferred ‘new’. (The ease with which authors fail to link their own work to earlier work seems to exemplify this point.) This approach simply does not make sense to me because it means that much of value is needlessly discredited, submerged, and lost. For me, a look at the history of this field provokes a call for greater ecumenism, for more willingness to see the connections across the decades, and for the enduring tolerance that making those connections should foster. As I take up these four questions, a connecting thread will be a problem that has fascinated me since my graduate school days in the late 1960s and early 1970s, namely that of people’s access to opportunity in the context of the geog- raphy of everyday life. The opportunities in question include, inter alia, jobs, child and elder care, health care, political participation, recreation, socializing, and shopping. This problem is one of several that have been central to economic geography for at least 40 years while having been conceptualized and analyzed differently over the years. A key dimension along which this question of access (along with many other questions) has been treated differently is that of the continuum defined by universality-particularity. Examining the various ways that people’s access to opportunity has been conceptualized and investigated can serve as an example of how the past can help to inform the future. One caveat at the outset: the version of the past offered here is my understanding, my interpretation, based on my 35 + years as an academic geographer. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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