Economic Geography
The new economic geography of the 1960s: from
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Economic and social geography
The new economic geography of the 1960s: from
location theories to the behavioural geography critique of spatial science The new economic geography of the 1960s focused attention on constructing general explanatory statements about the spatial structure of the economy as it sought to reconstruct economic geography as spatial science (for example, see Haggett 1965). Geographers sought to explain the locations of a variety of economic activities – agriculture, industry, commercial land use in cities and so on. However, the ways in which explanation was sought soon became seen to be problematic. At one level, this was because they conflated explanation with prediction; predictive accuracy became the measure of explanatory power. At another level, there were profound problems associated with an approach that sought to deduce equilibrium spatial patterns on the basis of restrictive assump- tions about the natural environment, human knowledge and the character of social processes. The fundamental difficulty was that such assumptions were indispensable to this particular deductive approach to theory building and explanation but were also both a pre-condition for and symptomatic of an impoverished and partial view of the social processes of the economy. Assumptions of the environment as an isotropic plane ignore the grounding of the economy in nature and the chron- ically uneven character of economic development. They also reduce the signifi- cance of spatial differentiation to variations in transport (and sometimes other production) costs within a pre-given space. Assumptions of perfect knowledge deny the fact that economic decisions are always made in a condition of partial knowledge and ignorance. Assumptions of static equilibrium deny the fact that economic processes are chronically in a state of dynamic disequilibrium, set on open-ended and unknown trajectories of change rather than inevitably and mechanistically circling around a known point of static equilibrium. In summary, while the approaches of the new economic geography of the 1960s placed ques- tions of explanation firmly back upon the agenda of economic geographers, as a result of these limitations they did so in a way that was based upon unhelpful abstractions. Consequently, they resulted in inadequate theory, providing only weak and thin explanations that failed to grasp the essential character of the key processes that produced geographies of economies and determined the locations of economic activities. These new approaches were soon criticised by behavioural geographers, who argued that their behavioural assumptions were untenable in an economy that exists in real space and time (for example, Pred 1967). They therefore argued the need to investigate what people actually did know, how they came to acquire this knowledge, and where they knew about, rather than assuming that they knew 48 Ray Hudson The ‘new’ economic geography? 49 everything and everywhere of relevance to a particular type of behaviour. For example, behavioural economic geographers focused on the knowledge that consumers had of retail environments in order to explain who shopped where for what and that key corporate decision makers possessed about alternative locations in an attempt to explain why economic activities were located in some places rather than in others. Such approaches, built upon a partial and imperfect grasp of the relations between knowledge and the spatial organization of the economy, generally resulted in little more than descriptive accounts of behaviour, with minimal explanatory power. As such, having set out to refine an explanatory approach, behavioural geographers unfortunately fell into the descriptive trap that neo-classical location theories had set out to escape. Consequently, they quickly slipped back into obscurity but their abandonment resulted in economic geographers pushing important questions of agency from the research agenda for a decade or so. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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