The ‘new’ economic geography?
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Within
economic geography, this led to a greater attention to the knowledges,
rationalities and actions of managers, workers
and consumers and the ways
in which these both reflected and affected their positions in the socio-spatial struc-
tures of the economy. This resulted in a more detailed understanding of how the
economic geographies of capitalism evolve as a result
of differential knowledges,
learning processes and rationalities and the asymmetrical power relations between
different groups of economic actors (for example, see Amin and Cohendet 2004;
Dicken 2003; Herod 2001; Peck 1996).
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