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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Gordon L. Clark (Halford Mackinder Professor of Geography and Fellow, St Peter's College, Oxford) , Meric S. Gertler (Goldring Professor of Canadian Studies and Professor of Geography and Planning, University of Toronto) , Maryann P. Feldman (Research Scientist, Institute for Policy Studies, and Associate Professor, Department of Economics, Johns Hopkins University)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 16.30cm , Height: 4.60cm , Length: 24.20cm Weight: 1.230kg ISBN: 9780198234104ISBN 10: 0198234104 Pages: 768 Publication Date: 26 October 2000 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of Contents1: Gordon L Clark, Maryann Feldmann, Meric Gertler: Economic Geography: Transition and Growth 2: Allen Scott: Economic Geography: The Great Half Century Part I. Conceptual Perspectives Section 1: Mapping the Territory 3: Paul Krugman: Where in the World is the 'New Economic Geography'? 4: Jamie Peck: Doing Regulation Section 2: Analytical Frameworks 5: Ed Glaeser: The New Economics of Urban and Regional Growth 6: Eric Sheppard: Geography or Economics? Conceptions of Space, Time, Interdependence, and Agency Part II. Global Economic Integration Section 3: Investment and Trade 7: Tony Venables and Howard Shatz: The Geography of International Investment 8: Michael Storpor: Globalization, Localization, and Trade Section 4: Development and Underdevelopment 9: John Gallup, Andrew Mellinger, and Jeffrey Sachs: Geography and Economic Development 10: Michael Watts: The Great Tablecloth: Bread and Butter Politics and the Political Economy of Food and Poverty Section 5: Finance Capital 11: Risto Laulajainen: The Regulation of International Finance 12: Adam Tickell: Finance and Localities Part III. Corporate Structure, Strategy, and Location Section 6: Competition, Location, and Strategy 13: Michael Porter: Locations, Clusters, and Company Strategy 14: Peter Dicken: Places and Flows: Situating International Investment 15: Neil Wrigley: The Globalization of Retail Capital: Themes for Economic Geography Section 7: Remaking the Corporation 16: Erica Schoenberger: The Management of Time and Space 17: David B. Audretsch: Corporate Form and Spatial Form Part IV. The Geography of Innovation Section 8: National and Localized Learning 18: Bengt-Ake Lundvall and Peter Maskell: National States and Economic Development: from National Systems of Production to National Systems of Knowledge Creation and Learning 19: Maryann Feldman: Location and Innovation: The New Economic Geography of Innovation, Spillover, and Agglomeration 20: Cristiano Antonelli: Restructuring and Innovation in Long Term Regional Change Section 9: Districts and Regional Innovation Systems 21: Bjorn Asheim: Industrial Districts: The Contributions of Marshall and Beyond 22: Beat Hotz-Hart: Innovation Networks, Regions, and Globalization Part V: Localities and Difference Section 10: Labour and Locality 23: Ron Martin: Local Labour Markets: Their Nature, Performance, and Regulation 24: Gordon Hanson: Firms, Workers, and the Geographic Concentration of Economic Activity Section 11: Gender, Race, and Place 25: Linda McDowelll: Feminists Rethink the Economic: The Economics of Gender/the Gender of Economics 26: John Kain: Racial and Economic Segregation in US Metropolitan Areas Section 12: Communities, Politics, and Power 27: Eric Swyngedouw: Elite Power, Global Forces, and the Political Economy of Global Development 28: Amy Glasmeier: Economic Geography in Practice: Local Economic Development Policy Part VI: Global Transformations Section 13: Environment and Regulation 29: R. Kerry Turner: Markets and Environmental Quality 30: David Angel: Environmental Innovation and Regulation Section 14: Trade and Investment Blocs 31: Tetsuo Abo: Spontaneous Integration in Japan and East Asia: Development Crisis and Beyond 32: John Holmes: Regional Economic Integration in North America 33: Ash Amin: The EU as more than a Triad Market for National Economic Spaces Part VII: Coda 34: Nigel Thrift: Pandora's Box? Cultural Geographies of EconomiesReviews`a state-of-the-art review of the subject at the millennium ... One of its strengths is that among these authors there are at least nine economists including Paul Krugman and Michael Porter who in recent years have made stimulating contributions to the subject ... This will be a valuable book for all advanced students of economic geography at universities and for academics in the field.' Chris Law, Geographical Association, July 2001 `it will be a valuable curriculum companion from which students will gain a great deal, whether guided, or exploring it in their own time ... the Handbook is a valuable collection and should be purchased for academic library shelves wherever spatial analysis is performed.' Phil Cooke, European Planning Studies, Vol.9, No.5, 2001 As the IT revolution runs its course, the old ideas that were useful guides to understanding twentieth-century economic regionalization and trade have been supplanted by a new conceptual apparatus. The Oxford Handbook of Economic Geography provides a comprehensive introduction to this apparatus that will be invaluable to advanced undergraduate and beginning graduate students, as well as to those instructors whose teaching was based in the ealier lore...an impressive, comprehensive introduction to a rapidly evolving field that is located where geography and economics intermingle. Brian J L Berry, School of Political Economy, University of Texas at Dallas An excellent overview of the intellectual ferment that characterizes contemporary economic geography, highlighting new approaches and perspectives amid continuing debates about the degree to which economics and geography are complements or substitutes for one another. Irwin Feller, Intercollege Research Program, Pennsylvania State University This is an excellent and much needed collection. It will make an important contribution to social science broadly, particularly geography and economics. The editors are highly regarded scholars in their own right. The contributors are the luminaries in the field; particularly notable is the fact that the editors have attracted leading economists in addition to the top economic geographers. This will make the volume truly unique and much valued. Richard Florida, Center for Economic Development, Carnegie Mellon University Whether scholar or student, this book is the place to come for comprehensive, critical, reflective and futuristic writing on economic geography. Together, these contributions define the field in all its dynamism, negotiating world-reshaping events from globalism to localism, technological change to new regional politics. Ann Markusen, Hubert Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota "`a state-of-the-art review of the subject at the millennium ... One of its strengths is that among these authors there are at least nine economists including Paul Krugman and Michael Porter who in recent years have made stimulating contributions to the subject ... This will be a valuable book for all advanced students of economic geography at universities and for academics in the field.' Chris Law, Geographical Association, July 2001 `it will be a valuable curriculum companion from which students will gain a great deal, whether guided, or exploring it in their own time ... the Handbook is a valuable collection and should be purchased for academic library shelves wherever spatial analysis is performed.' Phil Cooke, European Planning Studies, Vol.9, No.5, 2001 ""As the IT revolution runs its course, the old ideas that were useful guides to understanding twentieth-century economic regionalization and trade have been supplanted by a new conceptual apparatus. The Oxford Handbook of Economic Geography provides a comprehensive introduction to this apparatus that will be invaluable to advanced undergraduate and beginning graduate students, as well as to those instructors whose teaching was based in the ealier lore...an impressive, comprehensive introduction to a rapidly evolving field that is located where geography and economics intermingle."" Brian J L Berry, School of Political Economy, University of Texas at Dallas An excellent overview of the intellectual ferment that characterizes contemporary economic geography, highlighting new approaches and perspectives amid continuing debates about the degree to which economics and geography are complements or substitutes for one another. Irwin Feller, Intercollege Research Program, Pennsylvania State University This is an excellent and much needed collection. It will make an important contribution to social science broadly, particularly geography and economics. The editors are highly regarded scholars in their own right. The contributors are the luminaries in the field; particularly notable is the fact that the editors have attracted leading economists in addition to the top economic geographers. This will make the volume truly unique and much valued. Richard Florida, Center for Economic Development, Carnegie Mellon University Whether scholar or student, this book is the place to come for comprehensive, critical, reflective and futuristic writing on economic geography. Together, these contributions define the field in all its dynamism, negotiating world-reshaping events from globalism to localism, technological change to new regional politics. Ann Markusen, Hubert Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota" The contributors are the luminaries in the field; particularly notable is the fact that the editors have attracted leading economists in addition to the top economic geographers Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |