Remaking regional economies: power, labor, and firm strategies in the knowledge economy / by Susan Christopherson and Jennifer Clark
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- 9780415551281
- 338.064 CHR-R
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Library, SPAB F-1 | Non Fiction | 338.064 CHR-R (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 006749 |
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337 POL Politics of international political economy : | 338 MAN Manufacturing in the new urban economy / | 338.04 BAN-I I have a dream / | 338.064 CHR-R Remaking regional economies: | 338.064 SCH-F Fourth industrial revolution. | 338.09051 DIC-G Global shift: | 338.092 RUP-S Success is our birthright: a definitive biography of Nanik Rupani / |
Section 1: Shaping the Regional Project --
1. Introduction --
2. Firm Strategies: Resources, Context, and Territory --
3. Labor Markets and the Regional Project --
Section 2: Case Studies --
4. The Evolution of the Optics and Imaging Industry --
5. Runaway Production: Media Concentration and Spatial Competition --
Section 3: Learning Regions and Innovation Policies --
6. The Paradox of Innovation: Why Regional Innovation Systems Produce so Little Innovation (and so Few Jobs) --
7. The Learning Region Disconnect --
8. Remaking Regions: Considering Scale and Combining Investment and Distribution
Since the early 1980s, the region has been central to thinking about the character of the global economy. This book offers a critique of the 'new regionalism' and covers the 'regional question', including its concerns with equity and uneven development. It challenges to consider the region as a central scale of action in the global economy.
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