Iraq war have created an umbrella rationale for continuing old programmes as
well as funding new ones. But the work of economic geographers, I would argue,
did make major contributions to the institutional and programmatic realization
of a considerable peace dividend in the United States during the 1990s. First, it
helped many communities understand their crises, identify and secure transi-
tional assistance, and work with firms and unions to shift plants, bases, people and
technologies into other activities. Second, because defence conversion required
federal government involvement (since it was often the owner and always the
consumer of military-related capacity), intellectual work successfully made the
case for institutional innovations at the federal level and quickened the pace and
quality of conversion. Third, critiques of existing labour programmes helped
speed reform of worker displacement and retraining for defence workers, many
of whom were older, specialized, and clustered in regions hard hit by defence
cutbacks. Fourth, critiques of military corporate strategies in this era – mega-
defence mergers and aggressive efforts to export – helped to rein in approvals of
mergers and the more egregious proposed sales of high tech equipment to devel-
oping countries, whose resources were much better spent on building a civilian
economy (Markusen 2006).
On many other social, political and economic fronts, the scholarly and outreach
activities of political economy-informed economic geographers have made signif-
icant contributions to altering the trajectory of capitalist development.
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