Economic Geography
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Economic and social geography
Toward a re-synthesis
As I have tried to show in this chapter, Krugman-style geographical economics offers at best an extremely narrow vision of the dynamics of the economic landscape, and is in any case, less preoccupied with geography as such than it is with geography as just another domain within which markets unfold. Geographers and economists certainly occupy much common ground at the present time, but encounters between them on this shared terrain are endemi- cally susceptible to deeply-seated disputes about theoretical priorities. My guess is that the influence of the Krugman model will in any case soon wither away as geographical economics comes up against the model’s inner and outer limits, just as neoclassical regional science began to show signs of enervation after the mid-1970s in part as a consequence of its commitment to the strait-jacket of convexity and constant returns to scale (cf. Neary 2001; Thisse 1997). As it happens, any such retreat may just possibly help to open up opportunities for more fruitful future encounters between geographers and economists over issues of space (see also Sjöberg and Sjöholm 2002). For the present, the undisputed major contribution of geographical economics to our understanding of spatial problems has been its resuscitation of the notion of pecuniary externalities in a world of Chamberlinian competition. The cultural turn, for its part, has sought to take economic geography in an altogether different direction. In some degree, of course, the clashing claims of economic geographers and cultural geographers over the last decade or so can be interpreted as expressions of an internal power struggle for status and A perspective of economic geography 69 influence in the profession of geography as a whole. This struggle owes much to the unquestioned intellectual re-invigoration and consequent self-assertion of cultural geography that occurred over the 1990s as cultural studies expanded in the academy at large. Despite the clashes, there remains, as I have indicated, much useful work to be accomplished by cooperation between economic and cultural geographers in any effort to comprehend the spatiality and locational dynamics of modern capitalism (Bathelt and Glückler 2003; Gertler 2003a; Gregson et al. 2001; Yeung 2003). At the same time, there will undoubtedly continue to be strong points of divergence between the two subdisciplines; lines of investigation opened up by economic geographers where cultural geog- raphers hesitate to tread, and vice versa. A degree of mutual tolerance (though certainly not automatic and uncritical mutual endorsement) is no doubt called for in this situation. Notwithstanding all the theoretical turbulence of the last few decades, there is probably still wide agreement among economic geographers, as such, that one of the main tasks we face is in the end some sort of transformative understanding of the historical geography of capitalist society (Harvey 1982; Harvey and Scott 1989). I suspect, as well, that most economic geographers would agree with the proposition that we need some sort of new synthesis in order to pursue this task more effectively (cf. Castree 1999), i.e. a revised cognitive map that can help us make sense of all the complex contemporary tendencies that have turned what critical theorists used hopefully to call ‘late capitalism’ into the triumphant and rejuvenated juggernaut that it is today. I make this claim about the need for a new synthesis in full cognizance of the reductionist dangers that it opens up (cf. Amin and Robbins 1990; Sayer 2000). Equally, I want to avoid the self-defeating conclusion that because of these dangers we must always downsize our theoret- ical ambitions. One of the truly disconcerting aspects of much geographical work today is that it preaches a doctrine that privileges the small, the piecemeal, and the local, even as capital plays out its own grandiose saga of expansion and recuperation at an increasingly globalized scale. A prospective economic geography capable of dealing with the contemporary world must hew closely, it seems to me, to the following programmatic goals if it is to achieve a powerful purchase on both scientific insight and progressive political strategy. • To begin at the beginning: economic geography needs to work out a theo- retical re-description of capitalism as a structure of production and consump- tion and as an engine of accumulation, taking into account the dramatic changes that have occurred in recent decades in such phenomena as techno- logy, forms of industrial and corporate organization, financial systems, labor markets, and so on. This theoretical re-description must be sensitive to the generic or quasi-generic forms of capitalist development that occur in differ- ent times in different places, which, in turn, entails attention to the kinds of issues that regulation theorists have identified under the general rubric of regimes of accumulation (Aglietta 1976; Lipietz 1986). 70 Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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