Content
2024, Volume 17, Issue 2
- 259-274 ‘Left behind places’: What can be done about them?
by Stefania Fiorentino & Amy K Glasmeier & Linda Lobao & Ron Martin & Peter Tyler - 275-292 Geographies of discontent: measuring and understanding the feeling of abandonment in the Chilean region of Valparaiso (2019–2021)
by Pedro Fierro & Ignacio Aravena-Gonzalez & Patricio Aroca & Francisco Rowe - 293-306 Gathering round Big Tech: How the market for acquisitions concentrates the digital sector
by Carolin Ioramashvili & Maryann Feldman & Frederick Guy & Simona Iammarino - 307-322 High-tech development for “left behind” places: lessons-learnt from the Ruhr cybersecurity ecosystem
by Anna Butzin & Franz Flögel - 323-338 Building distributive populism: basic income and political alternatives to ethno-nationalism
by Marc Doussard - 339-358 The green transition and its potential territorial discontents
by Andrés Rodríguez-Pose & Federico Bartalucci - 359-374 Obstacles to local cooperation in fragmented, left-behind economies: an integrated framework
by Kira Gartzou-Katsouyanni - 375-392 Empowering left-behind places in Southwest China: participation in coffee value chains as place-based development
by Junxi Qian & Yuan Zeng & Xueqiong Tang & Xiaohui Hu - 393-406 Can infrastructure help ‘left behind’ places ‘catch up?’ Theorizing the role of built infrastructure in regional development
by Grete Gansauer & Julia H Haggerty & Kristin K Smith & Mark N Haggerty & Kelli F Roemer - 407-416 Mustering the political will to help left-behind places in a polarized USA
by Lisa R Pruitt - 417-424 What do we owe a place? How the debate about left-behind places is challenging how we distribute public funding and the problems it should address
by Lewis Dijkstra - 425-430 What does it mean to be ‘left behind?’
by Ann M Eisenberg
2024, Volume 17, Issue 1
- 1-16 ‘Left behind places’: what are they and why do they matter?
by Stefania Fiorentino & Amy K Glasmeier & Linda Lobao & Ron Martin & Peter Tyler - 17-36 Social ties, trust and the geography of discontent
by Lawrence McKay & Will Jennings & Gerry Stoker - 37-58 Who gets left behind by left behind places?
by Dylan S Connor & Aleksander K BergArizona & Tom Kemeny & Peter J Kedron - 59-74 Barriers to social inclusion and levels of urbanisation: Does it matter where you live?
by Adele Whelan & Anne Devlin & Seamus McGuinness - 75-86 Are rural firms left behind? Firm location and perceived job attractiveness of high-skilled workers
by Sabrina Jeworrek & Matthias Brachert - 87-102 Three types of income inequality: a comparison of left behind places and more developed regions in the EU
by Alessandra Faggian & Alessandra Michelangeli & Kateryna Tkach - 103-116 Coastal towns as ‘left-behind places’: economy, environment and planning
by Stefania Fiorentino & Franziska Sielker & John Tomaney - 117-136 Territorial identity and left-behind places: evidence from the central Italian Apennines from a time perspective
by Gabriele Morettini & Fabiano Compagnucci - 137-162 Left-behind places in central and eastern Europe—labour productivity aspect
by Pawel Dobrzanski & Sebastian Bobowski & Karenjit Clare - 163-180 Defining left behind places: an internationally comparative poset analysis
by Flavio Comim & Maria Abreu & Carolina Guinesi Mattos Borges - 181-200 Getting left behind? The localised consequences of exclusion from the credit market for UK SMEs
by Marc Cowling & Ross Brown & Weixi Liu & Augusto Rocha - 201-218 The role of time and space in the identification of left behind regions: a case study of Denmark
by Sigrid JessenNordregio - 219-234 Relational hinterlands in the USA have become disconnected from major global centres
by Maximilian Buchholz & Harald Bathelt - 235-248 Left behind places in Brazil: the dynamics of regional inequalities and public policies in the early 21st century
by Humberto Martins - 249-258 Persistently poor, left-behind and chronically disconnected
by Kenan Fikri
2023, Volume 16, Issue 3
- 373-390 Re-imagining evolutionary economic geography
by Dieter F Kogler & Emil Evenhuis & Elisa Giuliani & Ron Martin & Elvira Uyarra & Ron Boschma - 391-404 Advancing spatial ontology in evolutionary economic geography
by Han Chu & Robert Hassink - 405-416 Capabilities, institutions and regional economic development: a proposed synthesis
by Koen Frenken & Frank Neffke & Alje van Dam - 417-430 Regional diversification and labour market upgrading: local access to skill-related high-income jobs helps workers escaping low-wage employment
by Zoltán Elekes & Anna Baranowska-Rataj & Rikard Eriksson - 431-444 Upward job mobility in local economies
by Martin Henning & Orsa Kekezi - 445-462 Making spatial evolution work for all? A framework for inclusive path development
by Maximilian Benner - 463-480 Conventions, markets and industry evolution: the example of the wind turbine industry in Germany 1977–2021
by Max-Peter Menzel - 481-494 Reinforcing path marginalization: revealing the unaccounted labour organization at a mining frontier in Indonesia
by Diana Vela-Almeida & Asbjørn Karlsen - 495-510 Learning from architectural theory about how cities work as complex and evolving spatial systems
by Francesca Froy - 511-528 Inventors, firms and localities: insights into the nexus that forms and alters the evolution of regional knowledge spaces
by Hyunha Shin & Keungoui Kim & Junmin Lee & Dieter F Kogler - 529-542 Towards an evolutionary economic geography research agenda to study migration and innovation
by Andrea Morrison - 543-560 Geographical evolutionary political economy: linking local evolution with uneven and combined development
by Jürgen Essletzbichler & Manuel Scholz-Wäckerle & Lena Gerdes & Hans-Peter Wieland & Christian Dorninger - 561-586 Schumpeter’s Gesetz and Gestalt in space: exploring evolutionary economic geographies of money and finance
by David Bieri - 587-592 Realizing the promise of evolutionary economic geography: ecosystem perspectives
by Maryann P Feldman - 593-598 Novelty, dynamics and competition: a commentary on the nature of economic evolution
by Stan Metcalfe - 599-606 Evolutionary economic geography: the role of economics and why consilience matters
by Kurt Dopfer
2023, Volume 16, Issue 2
- 245-256 The power of platforms—precarity and place
by Anna Davies & Betsy Donald & Mia Gray - 257-268 FinTech platform regulation: regulating with/against platforms in the UK and China
by Paul Langley & Andrew Leyshon - 269-288 Platforming populism: the services transition, precarious urbanization, and digital platforms in the rise of illiberal populism in the Philippines
by Jerik Cruz & Emille de la Cruz - 289-301 Towards ‘bogus employment?’ The contradictory outcomes of ride-hailing regulation in Berlin, Lisbon and Paris
by Valentin Niebler & Giorgio Pirina & Michelangelo Secchi & Franco Tomassoni - 303-318 Delivering difference: ‘Unbelonging’ among US platform parcel delivery workers
by Hannah Johnston & Yana Mommadova & Steven Vallas & Juliet Schor - 319-334 Placing the platform economy: the emerging, developing and upgrading of Taobao villages as a platform-based place making phenomenon in China
by Han Chu & Robert Hassink & Dixiang Xie & Xiaohui Hu - 335-348 When local business faded away: the uneven impact of Airbnb on the geography of economic activities
by Alberto Hidalgo & Massimo Riccaboni & Francisco J Velazquez - 349-359 Digitalisation of Indian smart cities: post-Covid-19 approaches to data, recognition and health monitoring
by Sneha Krishnan - 361-365 Surveillance and the power of platforms
by David Lyon - 367-372 Platforms, blockchains and the challenges of decentralization
by Matthew Zook
2023, Volume 16, Issue 1
- 1-18 Understanding the post-COVID state and its geographies
by Mia Gray & Michael Kitson & Linda Lobao & Ron Martin - 19-29 The manufactured crisis of COVID-Keynesianism in Britain, Germany and the USA
by James D G Wood & Valentina Ausserladscheider & Matthew Sparkes - 31-48 Crisis and state transformation: Covid-19, levelling up and the UK’s incoherent state
by David Richards & Sam Warner & Martin J Smith & Diane Coyle - 49-64 Building back before: fiscal and monetary support for the economy in Britain amid the COVID-19 crisis
by Craig Berry & Daniel Bailey & David Beel & Nick O’Donovan - 65-79 Crisis and the welfare state: the role of public employment services for job placement and the Danish flexicurity system during COVID-19
by Torben Dall & Timo Mitze - 81-91 Furloughing and COVID-19: assessing regulatory reform of the state
by David A Spencer & Mark Stuart & Chris Forde & Christopher J McLachlan - 93-104 Electoral Politics of Disaster: how earthquake and pandemic relief was used to earn votes
by Drini Imami & Dorina Pojani & Elvina Merkaj - 105-117 Masking the Strangulation of Opposition Parties as Pandemic Response: Austerity Measures Targeting the Local Level in Hungary
by Daniel Kovarek & Gábor Dobos - 119-133 An agency perspective of regional economic resilience during COVID-19: the role of the local state’s place-based leadership in Kunshan, China
by Di WuKey & Xiaohui Hu & Wen Chen & Feng Yuan - 135-150 Ideology and policy decision-making in the face of the Coronavirus pandemic in the USA
by Juan Prieto-Rodríguez & Rafael Salas & Douglas Noonan & Francisco Cabeza-Martinez & Javier Ramos-Gutierrez - 151-166 Ideology, political polarisation and agility of policy responses: was weak executive federalism a curse or a blessing for COVID-19 management in the USA?
by Óscar Gasulla & Germà Bel & Ferran A Mazaira-Font - 167-184 Economic stimulus measures in the pandemic: the role of fiscal decentralisation
by Ceyhun Elgin & Abdullah Yalaman & Sezer Yasar - 185-196 Intergovernmental dynamics in responding to COVID-19 in English and Australian cities
by Kate Broadhurst & Edward Steane & Vlad Mykhnenko & Nicholas Gray - 197-209 Challenging austerity under the COVID-19 state
by Mildred E Warner & Paige M Kelly & Xue Zhang - 211-223 COVID Keynesianism: locating inequality in the Anglo-American crisis response
by Johnna Montgomerie - 225-238 Walls of capital: quantitative easing, spatial inequality, and the winners and losers of Canada’s pandemic-era housing market
by Martine August & Dan Cohen & Emily Rosenman - 239-244 Covid-19 and a state in crisis: what can the UK learn from its own history?
by Hilary Cooper & Simon Szreter
2022, Volume 15, Issue 3
- 447-457 The post-Covid city
[Mobility, environment, and inequalities in the post-Covid city]
by Michael Batty & Judith Clifton & Peter Tyler & Li Wan - 459-475 Mobility, environment and inequalities in the post-COVID city
[Trade-offs between short-term mortality attributable to NO2 and O3 changes during the COVID-19 lockdown across major Spanish cities]
by Daniel Albalate & Germà Bel & Albert Gragera - 477-494 The impact of COVID-19 on bike-sharing travel pattern and flow structure: evidence from Wuhan
[Exploring bike-sharing travel patterns and trip purposes using smart card data and online point of interests]
by XQiumeng Li & Weipan Xu - 495-513 Impacts and implications for the post-COVID city: the case of Toronto
[COVID-19: lessons for an Urban(izing) World]
by Shauna Brail & Mark Kleinman - 515-535 Pandemic polycentricity? Mobility and migration patterns across New York over the course of the Covid-19 pandemic
[Rural to urban long-distance commuting in Sweden: trends, characteristics and pathways]
by Laura Schmahmann & Ate Poorthuis & Karen Chapple - 537-550 Inside out: human mobility big data show how COVID-19 changed the urban network structure in the Seoul Metropolitan Area
[Information technology and urban form]
by Young-Long Kim & Bogang Jun - 551-573 The economic resilience of a city: the effect of relatedness on the survival of amenity shops during the COVID-19 pandemic
[A tutorial on multilevel survival analysis: methods, models and applications]
by Bogang Jun & C Jara-Figueroa & Donghyeon Yu - 575-596 Planning for resilient central-city shopping districts in the post-Covid era: an explanatory case study of the Hoddle Grid in Melbourne
[Social and ecological resilience: are they related?]
by Fujie Rao & Sun Sheng Han & Ran Pan - 597-614 The future of the corporate office? Emerging trends in the post-Covid city
[Planners as market actors: rethinking state-market relations in land and property]
by Stefania Fiorentino & Nicola Livingstone & Pat McAllister & Howard Cooke - 615-634 ‘Covid-19 opened the pandora box’ of the creative city: creative and cultural workers against precarity in Milan
[A heterodox re-reading of creative work: the diverse economies of Danish visual artists]
by Jessica Tanghetti & Roberta Comunian & Tamsyn Dent - 635-661 Cities, innovation and entrepreneurial ecosystems: assessing the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic
[The rise of urban tech: how innovations for cities come from cities]
by Robert Huggins & Piers Thompson - 663-682 Urban-regional disparities in mental health signals in Australia during the COVID-19 pandemic: a study via Twitter data and machine learning models
[An integrated blueprint for digital mental health services amidst COVID-19]
by Siqin Wang & 6Mengxi Zhang & Xiao Huang & Tao Hu & Zhenlong Li & Qian Chayn Sun - 683-702 Estimating the social and spatial impacts of Covid mitigation strategies in United Kingdom regions: synthetic data and dashboards
[Developing a sustainable exit strategy for COVID-19: health, economic and public policy implications]
by Rosalind Wallace & Rachel Franklin & Susan Grant-Muller & Alison Heppenstall & Victoria Houlden - 703-723 Covid-19 and heterogeneous restrictions: possible consequences for EU cities
[Analysis of mobility trends during the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic: exploring the impacts of global aviation and travel in selected cities]
by Matteo Migheli - 725-746 A tale of two recoveries: uncovering the imbalance between state-driven production and private consumption in post-pandemic Wuhan, China
[Evaluation of local leaders in China]
by Ziming Li & Xiangming Chen & Lei Wang - 747-755 Reflections on the post-Covid city
[Does working from home work? Evidence from a Chinese Experiment]
by Edward L Glaeser - 757-770 COVID-19 vaccines: a geographic, social and policy view of vaccination efforts in Ontario, Canada
[Racial equity in the fight against COVID-19: a qualitative study examining the importance of collecting race-based data in the Canadian context]
by Isaac I Bogoch & Sheliza Halani
2022, Volume 15, Issue 2
- 165-181 Globalisation in reverse? Reconfiguring the geographies of value chains and production networks
[Does Covid-19 Spark the End of Globalisation?]
by Huiwen Gong & Robert Hassink & Christopher Foster & Martin Hess & Harry Garretsen - 183-206 Offshore, re-shore, re-offshore: what happened to global manufacturing location between 2007 and 2014?
[The gravity model]
by Xiang Gao & Geoffrey J D Hewings & Cuihong Yang - 207-235 The network effect of deglobalisation on European regions
[De-globalisation? Global value chain in the post-COVID-19 age]
by Raffaele Giammetti & Luca Papi & Désirée Teobaldelli & Davide Ticchi - 237-259 Reshoring by small firms: dual sourcing strategies and local subcontracting in value chains
[The importance of being a capable supplier: Italian industrial firms in global value chains]
by Jacopo Canello & Giulio Buciuni & Gary Gereffi - 261-277 From globalising to regionalising to reshoring value chains? The case of Japan’s semiconductor industry
[Reorienting the drivers of development: alternative paradigms]
by Natsuki Kamakura - 279-303 Strategic coupling and institutional innovation in times of upheavals: the industrial chain chief model in Zhejiang, China
[Institutional change in economic geography]
by Huiwen Gong & Robert Hassink & Cassandra C Wang - 305-322 Navigating through the storm: conservancies as local institutions for regional resilience in Zambezi, Namibia
[From domestic to regional to global: Factory Africa and factory Latin America?: Chapter 3]
by Carolin Hulke & Linus Kalvelage & Jim Kairu & Javier Revilla Diez & Lucas Rutina - 323-342 Localization of global networks: new mandates for MNEs in Toronto’s innovation economy
[Why software is eating the world]
by David A Wolfe & Richard J DiFrancesco & Steven C Denney - 343-365 Regionalisation or domesticalisation? Configurations of China’s emerging domestic market-driven industrial robot production networks
[Shifting regional dynamics of global value chains: implications for economic and social upgrading in African horticulture]
by Tianlan Fu & Yeqing Cheng - 367-388 Regional assets and network switching: shifting geographies of ownership, control and capital in UK offshore oil
[Temporality and the evolution of GPNs: remaking BHP’s Pilbara iron ore network]
by Gavin Bridge & Alexander Dodge - 389-406 The global division of labour as enduring archipelago: thinking through the spatiality of ‘globalisation in reverse’
[Uneven and combined state capitalism]
by Michiel van Meeteren & Jana Kleibert - 407-436 Tasks, occupations and slowbalisation: on the limits of fragmentation
[Global value chains]
by Steven Brakman & Charles van Marrewijk - 437-443 Regional value chains in the Global South: governance implications for producers and workers?
[Trans-scalar embeddedness and governance deficits in global production networks: crisis in South African fruit]
by Stephanie Barrientos
2022, Volume 15, Issue 1
- 3-21 Rethinking spatial policy in an era of multiple crises
[An institutional perspective on regional economic development]
by Ron Martin & Flavia Martinelli & Judith Clifton - 23-38 Uneven development: convergence, divergence and politics
[Competitive austerity’ and the impasse of capitalist employment policy]
by Kevin R Cox - 39-56 Reframing urban and regional ‘development’ for ‘left behind’ places
[The shadow of the Pithead: understanding social and political attitudes in former coal mining communities in the UK]
by Danny MacKinnon & Louise Kempton & Peter O’Brien & Emma Ormerod & Andy Pike & John Tomaney - 57-74 Reframing spatial policy through targeting diagnostic tools: potential and deprivation
[An agenda for a reformed cohesion policy: a place-based approach to meeting European Union challenges and expectations]
by Christopher A Hooton - 75-92 Financialisation, regional economic development and the coronavirus crisis: a time for spatial monetary policy?
[The financialization of home and the mortgage market crisis]
by Martin Sokol & Leonardo Pataccini - 93-116 Can social housing help to integrate divided cities?
[Segregation and the urban rich; enclaves, networks and mobilities]
by Ivan Turok & Andreas Scheba & Justin Visagie - 117-139 Reacting to the 2008 crisis: Competitiveness performances of Southern Italy and CEE regions
[European cohesion policy in Italy: empirical evidence and interpretations]
by Paola De Vivo & Caterina Rinaldi - 141-159 Creative strategies for spatial policy making in Brazilian ‘new left regionalism’: fighting inequalities and COVID-19 in the north-east region
[A experiência de cooperação interestadual no Brasil: formas de atuação e seus desafios]
by Hipólita Siqueira & Carlos Brandão - 161-161 Corrigendum to: Geographies of Discontent: Sources, Manifestations and Consequences
by A De Ruyter & R Martin & P Tyler
2021, Volume 14, Issue 3
- 381-393 Geographies of discontent: sources, manifestations and consequences
by A De Ruyter & R Martin & P Tyler - 395-415 Of losers and laggards: the interplay of material conditions and individual perceptions in the shaping of EU discontent
by Jorge Díaz-Lanchas & Aleksandra Sojka & Filippo Di Pietro - 417-438 Discontent with democracy in Latin America
by Joselin Segovia & Nicola Pontarollo & Mercy Orellana - 439-456 Politics of discontent in Spain: the case of Vox and the Catalonian independence movement
by Arantza Gomez Arana - 457-481 Golfing with Trump. Social capital, decline, inequality, and the rise of populism in the US
by Andrés Rodríguez-Pose & Neil Lee & Cornelius Lipp - 483-506 Where do angry birds tweet? Income inequality and online hate in Italy
by Daria Denti & Alessandra Faggian - 507-527 Beyond remain vs. leave: understand changing voter perceptions and attitudes towards Populism—evidence from Scotland and the West Midlands
by Alex de Ruyter & David Hearne & Syed Mansoob Murshed & Geoff Whittam & Dennis Aguma - 529-544 Places that matter: Australia’s crisis intervention framework and voter response
by Sally Weller - 545-564 The UK ‘geography of discontent’: narratives, Brexit and inter-regional ‘levelling up’
by Philip McCann & Raquel Ortega-Argilés - 565-582 The urban-rural polarisation of political disenchantment: an investigation of social and political attitudes in 30 European countries
by Michael Kenny & Davide Luca - 583-599 Regional hierarchies of discontent: an accessibility approach
by Johan P Larsson & Özge Öner & Franziska Sielker - 601-617 The Stockholm Syndrome: the view of the capital by the “Places Left Behind”
by Jonna Rickardsson & Charlotta Mellander & Lina Bjerke - 619-624 Discontent and its geographies
by Richard Florida - 625-629 Regional policy narratives and the ‘geographies of discontent’
by Joaquim Oliveira Martins - 631-639 Recognising the geography of discontent in the USA: “Building Back Better” by countering regional divergence
by Mark Muro
2021, Volume 14, Issue 2
- 219-233 Regional foundations of energy transitions
by Lars Coenen & Teis Hansen & Amy Glasmeier & Robert Hassink - 235-252 Variegated capitalism, territoriality and the renewable energy transition: the case of the offshore wind industry in the Northeastern USA
by William Westgard-Cruice & Yuko Aoyama - 253-282 Greening the cloud: oligopoly-driven institutional transformations of the US electricity grid for commercial and industrial power purchases
by Jerry Patchell & Roger Hayter - 283-299 Understanding the uneven geography of urban energy transitions: insights from Edmonton, Canada
by Neelakshi Joshi & Sandeep Agrawal - 301-320 Territorial and institutional obduracy in regional transition: politicising the case of Flanders’ energy distribution system
by Griet Juwet & Laura Deruytter - 321-340 Frugal innovation in energy transitions: insights from solar energy cases in Brazil
by Hans-Christian Busch - 341-359 Aligning industry interests with urban priorities to foster energy transitions: insights from two Chinese cities
by Ping Huang & Zhen Yu - 361-378 Energy political ecologies in the South Pacific: the politics of energy transitions in Vanuatu
by Paul G Munro
2021, Volume 14, Issue 1
- 3-24 Rethinking the political economy of place: challenges of productivity and inclusion
by Emil Evenhuis & Neil Lee & Ron Martin & Peter Tyler - 25-49 Regional income disparities, monopoly and finance
by Maryann Feldman & Frederick Guy & Simona Iammarino - 51-68 Productivity divergence: state policy, corporate capture and labour power in the USA
by Mildred E Warner & Yuanshuo Xu - 69-91 Labour market polarisation as a localised process: evidence from Sweden
by Martin Henning & Rikard H Eriksson - 93-116 The political economy of places from a Sustainable Human Development perspective: the case of Emilia-Romagna
by Patrizio Bianchi & Mario Biggeri & Andrea Ferrannini - 117-139 Diversity in leading and laggard regions: living standards, residual income and regional policy
by Luca Calafati & Julie Froud & Colin Haslam & Sukhdev Johal & Karel Williams - 141-156 Understanding inclusive growth at local level: changing patterns and types of neighbourhood disadvantage in three English city-regions
by Ceri Hughes & Ruth Lupton - 157-178 Uneven geographies of economic recovery and the stickiness of individual displacement
by Vassilis Monastiriotis & Ian R Gordon & Ioannis Laliotis - 179-195 Scalar postpolitics, inclusive growth and inclusive economies: challenging the Greater Manchester agglomeration model
by Iain Deas & Graham Haughton & Kevin Ward - 197-215 The political economy of and practical policies for inclusive growth—a case study of Scotland
by Donald Houston & Georgiana Varna & Iain Docherty
2020, Volume 13, Issue 1
- 3-23 When machines think for us: the consequences for work and place
by Judith Clifton & Amy Glasmeier & Mia Gray - 25-35 The wrong kind of AI? Artificial intelligence and the future of labour demand
by Daron Acemoglu & Pascual Restrepo - 37-54 Artificial intelligence, tech corporate governance and the public interest regulatory response
by Alan Dignam - 55-76 The platform economy: restructuring the space of capitalist accumulation
by Martin Kenney & John Zysman - 77-97 Robots, skill demand and manufacturing in US regional labour markets
by Nancey Green Leigh & Benjamin Kraft & Heonyeong Lee - 99-115 Redeployment or robocalypse? Workers and automation in Ohio manufacturing SMEs
by Anna Waldman-Brown - 117-134 No automation please, we’re British: technology and the prospects for work
by David Spencer & Gary Slater - 135-152 Artificial intelligence in the legal sector: pressures and challenges of transformation
by Chay Brooks & Cristian Gherhes & Tim Vorley - 153-173 Are machines stealing our jobs?
by Andrea Gentili & Fabiano Compagnucci & Mauro Gallegati & Enzo Valentini - 175-192 OK Computer: the creation and integration of AI in Europe
by Bernardo S Buarque & Ronald B Davies & Ryan M Hynes & Dieter F Kogler - 193-193 Erratum to: Industrial Policy in China: The Planned Growth of Specialised Towns in Guangdong Province
by Elisa Barbieri & Marco R Di Tommaso & Chiara Pollio & Lauretta Rubini
2019, Volume 12, Issue 3
- 319-326 Industrial policy back on the agenda: putting industrial policy in its place?
by David Bailey & Amy Glasmeier & Philip R Tomlinson - 327-345 Industrial policy, place and democracy
by David Bailey & Dan Coffey & Maria Gavris & Carole Thornley - 347-368 Entrepreneurial ecosystems and public policy in action: a critique of the latest industrial policy blockbuster
by Ross Brown & Suzanne Mawson - 369-384 Opportunities and risks of localised industrial policy: the case of “maker-entrepreneurial ecosystems” in the USA
by Greg Schrock & Laura Wolf-Powers - 385-399 A developmental network city? Double embeddedness in New York
by Michael Indergaard - 401-422 Industrial Policy in China: The Planned Growth of Specialised Towns in Guangdong Province
by Elisa Barbieri & Marco R Di Tommaso & Chiara Pollio & Lauretta Rubini - 423-443 Do Enterprise Zones have a role to play in delivering a place-based industrial strategy?
by Christopher A Hooton & Peter Tyler - 445-466 Industrial strategy and the UK regions: sectorally narrow and spatially blind
by Steve Fothergill & Tony Gore & Peter Wells
2019, Volume 12, Issue 1
- 3-16 The New Silk Roads: an introduction to China’s Belt and Road Initiative
by Steven Brakman & Peter Frankopan & Harry Garretsen & Charles Van Marrewijk - 17-44 The wider economic benefits of transport corridors: a policy framework and illustrative application to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor
by Martin Melecky & Mark Roberts & Siddharth Sharma - 45-56 The Eurasian Land Bridge: linking regional value chains along the New Silk Road
by Richard Pomfret - 57-75 Iron Silk Roads: the geopolitics of past and present initiatives for the revival of Eurasian trade through overland transport corridors
by Irene (E) Anastasiadou - 77-104 The Belt and Road Initiative’s effect on supply-chain trade: evidence from structural gravity equations
by Tristan Kohl - 105-126 Product relatedness and export specialisation in China’s regions: a perspective of global–local interactions
by Xiyan Mao & Canfei He - 127-144 The New Silk Road: implications for higher education in China and the West?
by William Kirby & Marijk Van der Wende - 145-167 Chinese perspectives on the Belt and Road Initiative
by Michael Dunford & Weidong Liu
2018, Volume 11, Issue 3
- 389-408 The shrinking state? Understanding the assault on the public sector
by Linda Lobao & Mia Gray & Kevin Cox & Michael Kitson - 409-425 Austerity as epiphenomenon? Public assets before and beyond 2008
by Heather Whiteside - 427-441 Shrinking local autonomy: corporate coalitions and the subnational state
by Yunji Kim & Mildred E Warner - 443-457 Growing care gaps, shrinking state? Home care workers and the Fair Labor Standards Act
by Kim England & Caitlin Alcorn - 459-483 Politics, State discretion and retrenchment in safety net provision: evidence from the USA in the post-Welfare Reform era
by Sarah K Bruch & KaLeigh K White - 485-501 Shrinking the state in housing: challenges, transitions and ambiguities
by Alan Murie - 503-517 Making sense of remunicipalisation: theoretical reflections on and political possibilities from Germany’s Rekommumalisierung process
by Andrew Cumbers & Sören Becker - 519-539 Red state, blue state: Neoliberalism, politics and public sector union membership in the US states
by Todd E Vachon & Michael Wallace - 541-563 The depths of the cuts: the uneven geography of local government austerity
by Mia Gray & Anna Barford - 565-585 Entrepreneurial urbanism, austerity and economic governance
by Crispian Fuller - 587-608 The crisis as opportunity? On the role of the Troika in constructing the European consolidation state
by Judith Clifton & Daniel Diaz-Fuentes & Ana Lara Gómez
2018, Volume 11, Issue 2
- 227-240 Regional industrial transformations in the interconnected global economy
by Päivi Oinas & Michaela Trippl & Maria Höyssä - 241-255 From success to failure, the disappearance of clusters: a study of a Norwegian boat-building cluster
by Arne Isaksen - 257-274 Unrelated knowledge combinations: the unexplored potential for regional industrial path development
by Markus Grillitsch & Bjørn Asheim & Michaela Trippl - 275-295 Biotech by bricolage? Agency, institutional relatedness and new path development in peripheral regions
by LuÃs Carvalho & Mário Vale - 297-315 Modularisation and spatial dynamics in the wind turbine industry: the example of firm relocations to Hamburg
by Max-Peter Menzel & J Markus Adrian - 317-333 The evolution of entrepreneurial ecosystems and the critical role of migrants. A Phase-Model based on a Study of IT startups in the Greater Tel Aviv Area
by Susann Schäfer & Sebastian Henn - 335-351 Policy and collective action in place
by Maryann Feldman & Nichola Lowe - 353-372 Beyond clusters? Field configuration and regional platforming: the Aviation Valley initiative in the Polish Podkarpackie region
by Lech Suwala & Grzegorz Micek - 373-386 The export of Germany’s “secret of success†dual technical VET: MNCs and multiscalar stakeholders changing the skill formation system in Mexico
by Judith Wiemann & Martina Fuchs
2018, Volume 11, Issue 1
- 3-16 Globalisation at a critical conjuncture?
by Ron Martin & Peter Tyler & Michael Storper & Emil Evenhuis & Amy Glasmeier - 17-33 Globalisation, uneven development and the North–South ‘big switch’
by Rory Horner & Seth Schindler & Daniel Haberly & Yuko Aoyama - 35-58 Globalisation redux: can China’s inside-out strategy catalyse economic development and integration across its Asian borderlands and beyond?
by Xiangming Chen - 59-72 On the brink of deglobalisation…again
by Peter A G van Bergeijk - 73-94 The victims of neoliberal globalisation and the rise of the populist vote: a comparative analysis of three recent electoral decisions
by Jürgen Essletzbichler & Franziska Disslbacher & Mathias Moser - 95-113 In what sense left behind by globalisation? Looking for a less reductionist geography of the populist surge in Europe
by Ian R Gordon - 115-141 Electoral Systems, Regional Resentment and the Surprising Success of Anglo-American Populism
by Jason S Spicer - 143-163 Immobility and the Brexit vote
by Neil Lee & Katy Morris & Thomas Kemeny - 165-175 Brexit and the relevance of regional personality traits: more psychological Openness could have swung the regional vote
by Harry Garretsen & Janka I Stoker & Dimitrios Soudis & Ron L Martin & Peter Jason Rentfrow - 177-187 Commentary Unpacking the possibilities of deglobalisation
by Finbarr Livesey