Economic Geography
The geographers’ reception of geographical economics
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Economic and social geography
The geographers’ reception of geographical economics
Rather predictably, the geographers’ first reaction to the new geographical econom- ics was one of virtually unqualified rejection. In a brief review of Krugman’s book, Johnston (1992: 1066) dismisses it with the comment ‘not recommended’. Martin (1999: 67) writes that geographical economics, ‘is not that new and it A perspective of economic geography 61 most certainly is not geography’. In a similar vein, Lee (2002: 353) rebuffs the entire enterprise with the comment that ‘there are . . . precious few grounds for some mutually beneficial conversation here’. Something of these reactions can no doubt be ascribed to geography’s endemic professional anxieties reflecting its relatively low standing on the academic totem pole, certainly by comparison with economics. Krugman’s taste- less self-promotion as the creative genius par excellence of economic geography, and the champion of four-square thinking generally, did nothing to assuage those anxieties. The geographers’ main complaints about this work have tended to revolve around their concern that it is unduly cut off from the wider social and political frameworks within which economic issues are actually played out. Many economic geographers’ perception of their own work, as well, points to practices of research that are grounded, open, polycentric, focused on rich empirical description, and deeply conscious of the contingency and complexity of things (Boddy 1999; Thrift and Olds 1996). I shall take issue with this particular line of self-justification later, but let us for the moment simply note some of its basic modulations. Thus, Clark (1998: 75) suggests that ‘a fine-grained substantive appreciation of diversity, combined with empirical methods of analysis like case studies are the proper methods of economic geography’. Martin (1999: 77) castigates geographical economics for its neglect of ‘real communities in real historical, social and cultural settings’. In a similar vein, Barnes (2003), picking up on the work of Geertz (1983), proclaims that all knowledge is local and that locational analysis in geography is (or should be) born out of specific contextual settings. Some of these comments point to significant deficiencies of geographical economics, and they need to be taken seriously (see also David 1999). In my opinion, however, they provide at best only peripheral glosses on the main issues at stake and they fail signally to grapple with the target’s central weakness, which, as I hope to demonstrate, reside in its limited analytical grasp of agglomeration economies and locational processes. I would also argue that the geographers’ critique has tended to veer too enthusiastically in favor of the virtues of the empirical and the particular and too forcefully against theoretical systematization and formal analysis, thereby implicitly abdicating from far too much that is of value on their own side (though I suspect that most of the geographers mentioned earlier would not consider this to be a fair judgment of what they are saying). In any case, a scientifically meaningful and politically progressive economic geography can scarcely allow itself to be reduced merely to close dialogue with endless empirical relata (Plummer and Sheppard 2001; Sayer 2000). A more penetrating engagement with the internal theoretical structure of geographical economics, it seems to me, is more than overdue. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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