substantiation for Porter’s claim that competitive advantage is based on the
exploitation of unique resources and competencies (Porter 1990), and points
to economic development as a territorial embedded process, maintaining that
‘competitive advantage is created and sustained through a highly localized process’
(Porter 1990: 19). The continuous success of many of these new economic
(regional) spaces (some of them were in fact not that new [e.g. the industrial
districts of the Third Italy]) also demonstrated beyond any doubt that geography
(understood as ‘context’ and not primarily ‘distance’), contingencies and contexts
still matters in a globalizing economy. It could even be argued that this tendency
towards spatial concentration has become more marked over time, not less.
My own interests in studying industrial districts as a paradigmatic example
of post-Fordist new economic spaces started in the early 1980s after my move
to the geography department at the University of Oslo as associate professor
in economic geography in August 1981. After a stay in Rome in the turn of
the year 1983/84, where I travelled around in the Third Italy and among other
researchers met with professors Garofoli in Pavia (now in Varese) and the late
Brusco in Modena. This was the start of years of cooperation that for my own
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