these decisions on work and workers. My research has run the gamut from large
secondary data sets to interviews with corporate executives, employees, and
entrepreneurs, but with a common goal: to understand better how firms make
decisions regarding
their corporate facilities, how entrepreneurs make use of
resources in both their local and non-local environments, and how small firms
organize and manage inter-firm networks of suppliers, customers, and competi-
tors. These questions can be answered only with
data that are expensive and
time-consuming to obtain.
My more recent work has been on the Internet and how firms and places use
technology to manage and communicate across space. A web site is now a (not
inexpensive) necessity for firms to attract customers, for places to attract tourists
and investors, and more generally as proof of one’s existence. If you can’t be
‘googled’, you don’t exist to growing numbers of people (Malecki 2002).
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