processes (production, distribution, exchange and consumption) mitigate
geographical inequalities in livelihood possibilities? This is central because of the
manifest influence of capitalism over livelihood possibilities throughout the one
hundred year career of economic geography. In seeking to tackle this question,
economic geography has faced three further questions:
1
(How) does geography matter to the spatial dynamics of capitalism? Answers
shape arguments about whether (and how) geography can contribute to our
understanding of spatial inequality.
2
What is the ‘economic’ and what is ‘geography’, in economic geography?
Answers shape how the big question is posed, and answered.
3
What is to be done, to redress spatial inequalities?
In the next section, I briefly caricature the remarkable diversification of theory,
philosophy and method, amongst those identifying themselves as undertaking
economic geography, and the diversity of answers to the above questions that has
emerged. For the project of economic geography that we all contribute to, diver-
sity can be both a strength and a weakness. In the concluding section I argue that
it has been progressively more debilitating than stimulating, indicating broad
schisms threatening our ability to effectively articulate a common project, but
that this can and must be reversed.
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