productivity, how to accelerate the development of new products and to break into
new markets, and how to manage increasingly complex global business organiza-
tions. Studies of industrial sectors such as food production, fishing, and primary
resource industries, where issues of resources and environment were of central
concern to business practice, sat uneasily on the fringes of industrial geography
and rarely impacted theory development in the field.
Even when issues of environment and resources were thrust squarely in the
forefront of economies, such as on the occasion of the oil price shocks of the
1970s, and the Bhopal chemical disaster of the 1980s, scholarship on these econ-
omy-environment concerns within geography tended to take place in specialized
niches, such as study groups on energy and the environment, and on risk-
hazards, rather than being a central and integrated part of the scholarship, and
especially the theory development, of economic geography. Calls by Fitzsimmons
(1989) and others for economic geography to address issues of environment and
nature-society relations had little impact. In part this was a result of the institu-
tional fragmentation that had been created within geography. As Castree (2004:
80) has noted ‘. . . because the environment is strung out between many different
parts of human geography, it is difficult to generate a critical mass of researchers
working on the same environmental issues, asking similar questions or deploying
similar theoretical apparatuses.’
For all of this, during the 1990s and with increasing momentum over the past
five years, issues of resources and the environment began to work themselves
onto the stage of economic geography (see, for example, Angel 2000; Bridge
2002; Gibbs 2002). In part this was a direct result of a broadening of the concept
of the economic and the engagement with different theoretical perspectives
beyond that of the dominant political-economy of the 1980s. With increased
interest in issues of development has come an engagement with an important
literature on political ecology (Peet and Watts 1996). Understudied sectors, such
as the processed food industries (Murdoch et al. 2000), have been a platform for
important work on constructions of nature and on concepts of quality. Studies
of other economic activities, from the tending of garden lawns (Robbins and
Sharp 2003) to biotechnology (Marsden et al. 2003), have raised important ques-
tions about the environment and technology in everyday life. Economic geogra-
phers have also engaged with inter-disciplinary research on issues such as human
dimensions of global environmental change (O’Brien and Leichenko 2003) and
ecological modernization (Gibbs 2003). The concept of nature itself has under-
gone close scrutiny in ways that connect to the cultural turn in economic geog-
raphy (Castree and Braun 2001). There has also been direct engagement with
some important resource issues, such as water supply (Bakker 2004). Indeed, the
literature of economic geography is now replete with calls to integrate the analy-
sis of resources and the environment into the core of human geography (Castree
2004), economic geography, and urban geography (Braun 2005).
It is with firms and industries themselves, however, that the real driver of
the current interest among economic geographers in economy-environment
relations lies. To be sure, issues of environment and resources are now firmly and
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