The scope of economic geography has gradually expanded beyond the realm of
production, and I attribute this expansion to economic geographers’ increasing
interaction with urban geographers and to the blurring of the boundary between
these two sub-disciplines. The traditional division of labor between economic and
urban geography assigned the study of production to the economic and the study
of reproduction to the urban; until the 1980s the two
seemed to be separated by
a firewall. In the 1960s and 1970s studies on the reproduction side (although
it was not called that) focused on housing and neighborhoods, with a nod to
employment only insofar as workplace location (implicitly understood to be that
of the male household head) was assumed to influence residential location. Urban
geographers did not pay much attention to the impact of multiple earners in
households and rarely looked within the household to reveal the power relation-
ships at work there. Economic geographers did not see economic decisions as
being embedded in larger fields of social relations.
Feminist geographers, most of whom have
backgrounds in urban geography,
have influenced economic geography by showing the importance of the links
between production and reproduction, demonstrating these ties via in-depth
studies of the material circumstances of people’s everyday lives in places, and
thereby emphasizing the importance of place. An emphasis on place highlights the
intricate and profound connections between the economic and the non-economic –
indeed the difficulty of separating the two. Urban geographers, in part because
of
the nature of the urban, have been more comfortable than have economic
geographers with the study of places, in all their confusion, complexities, and
conundrums. By contrast, economic geographers have been interested in place
only secondarily as it relates, for example, to industrial clusters.
In sum, what counts as economic geography has
broadened both within and
beyond the study of production, such that economic geographers are increas-
ingly probing the connections between the economic and the non-economic
or eroding the boundaries around what has been considered as the economic,
to include the social, cultural, and political. If we want to understand how
economic geographies come to be, how they
function and how they change,
I think we need to be alert to the interdependencies between production and
reproduction and to the interdependencies created by space and place – and not
just one industry at a time. I hope that what will count as economic geography
will be sensitive to these interdependencies.
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