Economic Geography
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Economic and social geography
Sharmistha Bagchi-Sen and Helen Lawton Smith
Amy Glasmeier explores why economic geographers have been largely absent in policy-making circles, particularly in the USA. Her chapter records and deplores the lack of willingness for economic geographers to critically engage in debates that span academia and public policy. She argues that academic engagement in the political process best occurs when society is gravitating in that direction. Therefore at times like the 1980s, and in the current period (2006) (post-Hurricane Katrina), many streams come together in a confluence of ideas that result in an intellectual consensus about critical problems to which geogra- phers’ best efforts and significant energy are profitably aimed. She implores economic geographers not to be silent and to use their skills and knowledge vociferously engaging in debates and making a difference to how issues are being understood. John Lovering takes to task economic geography’s excessive embrace of the Empire of Capital. He provides a critique of what he identifies as the Post- Cultural-Turn Economic Geography (PCTEG), arguing that due to a number of influences, PCTEG is economic only in a thematic sense and is removed from an empirically informed awareness of the planet we live on. Ann Green reflects on developments in labour market geographies, how they are measured and understood. Since the 1980s, methods of analysis have become more qualitative, theoretical, more focused on social and cultural issues and towards more detailed disaggregation. She identifies four major concerns of researchers: labour market adjustments, the balance between migration and commuting, area perceptions in labour market behaviour and the role of labour market intermediaries. She identifies changing policy issues and argues that economic geographers have an important role in contributing to the debate in what policy levers are available at different geographical scales to influence policy outcomes. Green argues that a central question for research is ‘What is the capac- ity for mobility and flexibility in labour markets?’ Ed Malecki dates the late 1970s as the time when technological change was recognized by a small number of scholars, including himself, as the explana- tion for why companies, especially large companies, were located and how those locations changed over time. He argues that technology, broadly conceived as knowledge and application, continues to be fundamental to technological change and related regional development. Finally, we would like to thank all of the contributors to the five sessions at the Centennial Meeting of the AAG. We are particularly grateful to Allen Scott for his keynote, which gave our event such a wonderful start. All of the sessions were enormously stimulating. We thank the audience for their participation and contribution. We hope that this book captures the excitement experienced by economic geographers, at these sessions, looking ahead at the twenty-first century. Introduction: the past, present and future of economic geography 7 |
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