of economic geography within and beyond geography had been constrained in
the past by its own limitations. Some argued that the ‘mindless’ data crunching
and modelling of the 1960s and 1970s that marked the ‘quantitative revolution’
was the beginning of the end of geography’s appeal to wide audiences. Others
argued that the failure to engage policymakers is another reason why economic
geography, more so in the US than the UK, does not have a wide reaching influ-
ence in other social sciences or business. All recognized that both quantitative
as well as qualitative methodologies are important. All argued for the need of
rigour in training as we prepare a new generation of economic geographers. As
a synthesizer of many
disciplines and a field, which offers immense synergy in
bringing together ideas and practices from other social sciences, humanities, law
and business, economic geography is and should be an important component
of geography pedagogy from undergraduate/freshman year through doctoral
training. As many of the contributors point out, economists such as Krugman and
Porter have received enormous public and academic attention and have been
influential in stimulating a critical appraisal of the ‘economic’
within geography
from within the discipline as exemplified in this book.
Through a collection of 20 chapters on theoretical constructs and methodolo-
gies, debates and discourses, as well as links to policymaking and policy evalua-
tion, this book provides a succinct view of concepts and their historical trajectories
in economic geography (see the organization of chapters below). Contributions
of many other key researchers in economic geography are reflected in these chap-
ters. The book demonstrates the differing roots and creates a common legacy in
understanding dynamic dependencies in a globalized world. The contributors
record changing foci and methodologies from the 1960–1980 period of quanti-
tative
economic geography, the 1980s interest in understanding how regimes of
accumulation in a capitalist world construct spaces of uneven development, and
how the 1990s literature was enriched by differing viewpoints and methodolo-
gies which were designed to understand the local effects of the global space
economy. In the new century, especially at the Centennial Meeting of the AAG,
the overwhelming response has been that of bridging gaps across ‘voices within
the sub-discipline of economic geography’ in order to maximize our understand-
ing of processes that shape our social,
political, and economic existence. The
intention of this book then is to expose its audience to the breadth of the disci-
pline and at the same time allowing the reader to engage in current debates
and understand the critical components of research in economic geography,
theoretical, empirical or applied.
The book has three sections: (I) Economic Geography – Roots and Legacy, (II)
Globalization and Contemporary Capitalism, and (III) Regional Competitive
Advantage – Industrial Change, Human Capital and Public Policy.
In the first section, Sheppard, Hanson, McDowell, Hudson,
and Scott reflect
on advances in economic geography. Sheppard discusses the emergence of the
field of economic geography with specific focus on the location theory, political
economy, the ‘cultural turn’, feminist approaches, and geographical economics.
At the AAG session, Eric Sheppard stated:
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