Economic Geography
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Economic and social geography
The question of access
For me, the really interesting questions still have to do with the relationship between people and place: How do people’s actions and decisions, individually and collectively, create the structures that then enable and constrain them? The question of access – the access of people and the access of places – to opportu- nity has been central to economic geography for at least the past 40 years (think of Weber’s industrial location model), and the changing conceptualizations of access have both reflected and driven the enlarging of economic geography 26 Susan Hanson described in the previous section. In general, the shift has entailed a move away from simplicity and abstraction, toward a growing appreciation for complexity and specificity in understandings of access. From the earliest days of the so-called quantitative revolution, spatial access has been at the core of what economic geographers studied, and from the begin- ning, one focus has been on the relationship between human spatial behavior (individuals’ movements in space) and spatial structures (the spatial organization of activity sites such as shops, workplaces, or towns). Although the dialectics and synergies of this relationship were appreciated from the start, the initial empha- sis was on spatial structures as the outcome of spatial behaviors. An example is the body of work by Brian J. L. Berry and others aimed at empirically testing the tenets of Central Place Theory in various US contexts (Berry 1967). These studies articulated a concern for people’s access to opportunities, where access was seen in terms of spatial separation (measured in distance or travel time) and opportunities were central places (agglomerations of retail facilities) of varying sizes. With an overriding concern to tease out the important generalizations about the dependencies between human spatial behavior and the geography of retailing (with an emphasis on explaining spatial patterns), these rich empirical studies grew out of the drive to make geography a respected scientific enterprise by discovering universal laws. In fact, the empirical focus of these studies compli- cated Christaller’s model by negating the isotropic plain and testing the extent to which actual behavior fit with the Central Place Theory assumptions of completely rational, utility-maximizing, distance-minimizing behavior. An enduring tension in geography has been that between the general and the specific, and this tension has characterized studies of access. In particular, concep- tualizations of access have come to incorporate more complex understandings of human agency as well as of geographic context. Perhaps most important, economic geographers now recognize that people sharing a common location do not necessarily share equal access to opportunities; variations among people, especially along the lines of gender, class, and race, significantly affect access (Deka 2004). Actors are no longer thought of as autonomous, independent decision makers, but rather as individuals who are embedded in various socio- geographical networks, which enable and constrain access. The geographic scales at which the contexts of access are conceptualized have moved beyond primarily the local and regional to encompass the international, as in Gerry Pratt’s study of the labor markets for Filipina nannies (Pratt 1999), and the Internet and other communication technologies have further complicated the question of spatial access (Kwan and Weber 2003). For these and other reasons, the relation- ship between proximity and access has become more complicated. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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