sought people who would tell them what they wanted to hear (for a critique see
Garvin 1983; Fuellhart and Glasmeier 2003; Glasmeier 1999). We unwittingly
became servants of a policy perspective that turned problems once described as
regional misfortune into the practice of regional competition
in which few places
could hope to succeed. Economic geographers were listened to as long as they
said what others wanted them to say. During this period, policymakers chose to
ignore exhortations about probabilities and likelihoods. Those who criticized these
overly optimistic tales of development were replaced by others who would reiter-
ate what
policymakers found palatable, if unattainable.
Debates about the efficacy of such policies did not lead to evaluation research
that would have put muscle behind the critique. Clearly, without the evidence
needed to support single topic strategies of development, economic geographers
can never be serious policy analysts. When policymakers stop listening to our
warnings, economic geographers should
have turned to verifiable, critical analy-
sis. Unfortunately, policy analysis skills are required to stay active in this type of
debate. It is too often the case that economic geographers infrequently exercise
evaluation skills that can be brought to bear on public debate.
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