Economic Geography
What approaches and methods will we use?
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Economic and social geography
What approaches and methods will we use?
Just as the questions posed by economic geographers have broadened in the past few decades, so have the approaches and methods that economic geographers use. Thinking back, thinking ahead 27 I’ll briefly review some aspects of this broadening and provide an example using a study that examined access to employment. The theoretical frameworks, approaches, and methods adopted by the leaders of the quantitative revolution in geography were largely borrowed from neoclas- sical economics. As a result, an approach that was widely used by proponents of spatial analysis in the 1960s entailed the development of deductive models and the subsequent testing of these models with available (secondary) data (Dacey 1966). At the core of these deductive models was economic man, that completely rational, profit-maximizing, all-knowing, a-social individual whose decisions drove the models. Economic man was the main target of behavioral geography, which emerged in the late 1960s as a reaction against the rather rigid, mechanistic form of agency implied in this neoclassical actor. I see behavioral geography very much as an outgrowth of the quantitative revolution. For one thing, students who were inspired by this alternative to the neoclassical view of the world had been deeply immersed in mathematics, philos- ophy of science, mathematical modeling, and quantitative methods. The goal of behavioral geographers was not so much to reject these accoutrements of the quantitative revolution as it was to humanize economic man – to recognize that people do not have complete information, are not always distance minimizing, are embedded in networks of social relations, and therefore may base decisions on factors other than sheer economic rationality. If people do not follow the precisely prescribed decision-making calculus of economic man, how do they actually make decisions? Although it is currently fashionable to ridicule behavioral geography as positivistic and somewhat simplistic, I see it as a highly significant phase of our disciplinary history insofar as it was the very beginning of the idea that people are different and that these differences matter immensely to decision making and to behavior. Behavioral geography represents the beginning, in geography, of looking at agency in a meaningful way by trying to grapple with some of the complexities that agency poses. From these origins have grown distinctly un-positivistic interests in, for example, difference, identity construction, meaning, positionality, and the social construction of space and scale. These more recent developments also incorporate approaches that emerged in reaction to (i.e. in order to correct some of the deficiencies in) behavioral geography, namely those approaches that pay attention to social structures, institutions, and cultures. One example of studies of access that in some ways trace their origins to behavioral geography yet integrate other approaches is the work that Gerry Pratt and I carried out on gender and urban labor markets in Worcester, Massachusetts in the 1980s and 1990s, summarized in Hanson and Pratt (1995). This series of studies grew out of one simple finding from analyzing travel data from Baltimore, Maryland, namely that women and men who work in female-dominated occupa- tions (such as clerical work or elementary teaching) work closer to home than do those who work in other occupations (Hanson and Johnston 1985), a finding that raised the big question that became the focus of our study: What is the rela- tionship between geography and gender-based occupational segregation? 28 Susan Hanson Through in-depth interviews with household members and employers, and through analyses that ranged in scale from intra-household to the workplace, the community, the nation state, and global movements of workers, we examined how spatial divisions of labor, and therefore (often lack of) access to opportuni- ties, are created from the decisions of people within households and employers as well as from social networks, community structures (such as different norms and forms of child care), and local cultures (such as rootedness to place or the practice of the intergenerational transfer of housing within families). My hope is that in their approaches and methods economic geographers of the future will combine theoretical and empirical work, will pose genuinely open-ended research questions and be open to surprises, and will productively mix qualitative and quantitative approaches. I believe it is now apparent that the scale of analysis is not related to the level of sophistication of the theoretical analysis (that is, small scale does not equate to being a-theoretical), empirical work does not equate to a lack of abstraction, and attention to complexity does not equate to disregard for theory (Massey 1994). Theory and data are closely linked, and this link can be especially productively explored via fieldwork and comparative studies. In line with my view that difference encourages creativity, I would also encourage economic geographers to engage in collaborative fieldwork with international colleagues in field sites outside one’s country of origin. I am not enthralled by studies in which the investigator knows (or at least appears to know) the answer to the research question before launching the study, and I urge students to pose research questions that are genuinely open-ended, rather than questions that are aimed at proving something the investigator is already quite certain about. Why spend several years of your life researching some- thing you are not genuinely curious about? A related point is the challenge to be continually open to surprises throughout the research process; every open-ended research question leads to surprises, and sometimes probing these surprises is enlightening indeed. It’s often interesting at the end of a project to reflect on what you learned that was truly unexpected. In this regard, a piece of advice that Professor Shalom Reichmann 2 gave me years ago was, ‘Don’t ignore the outliers; they can tell you a lot about what’s going on’. I am encouraged by the increasing number of economic geographers who are combining quantitative and qualitative approaches in their work, a trend that bodes well for the future. As Eric Sheppard has pointed out, there is no need to create a dualism between the quantitative and the qualitative as some are wont to do, nor is it sensible to equate one (the quantitative) with positivism and the other (the qualitative) with critical approaches in geography (Sheppard 2001). The two approaches are complementary, so that when employed together they provide a much fuller analysis than can either in isolation. Moreover, they often enable the investigator to communicate effectively with different audiences; government officials may be partial to quantitative information, for example Hanson and Pratt (2003). In using each of these approaches, however, I think we need to be as transparent as possible in describing the methods and especially the categories we use; for example, how much heterogeneity is hiding within any Thinking back, thinking ahead 29 one category? I would also like to see us think carefully about – and raise the bar for – the standards of evidence that we collectively agree on as acceptable in economic geography scholarship, whether that scholarship uses quantitative or qualitative methods. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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