The ‘new’ economic geography?
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everything and everywhere of relevance to a particular type of behaviour. For
example, behavioural economic geographers focused on the knowledge that
consumers had of retail environments in order to explain who shopped where for
what and that key corporate decision makers possessed about alternative locations
in an attempt to explain why economic activities were located in some places
rather than in others. Such approaches, built upon a partial and imperfect grasp
of the relations between knowledge and the spatial organization of the economy,
generally resulted in little more than descriptive accounts of behaviour, with
minimal explanatory power. As such, having set out to refine an explanatory
approach, behavioural geographers unfortunately fell into the descriptive trap
that neo-classical location theories had set out to escape. Consequently, they
quickly slipped back into obscurity but their abandonment resulted in economic
geographers pushing important questions of agency from the research agenda for
a decade or so.
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