1st Edition

'Whither regional studies?'

Edited By Andy Pike Copyright 2009
    136 Pages
    by Routledge

    132 Pages
    by Routledge

    Regional studies are at a vibrant conjuncture. ‘Regions’ continue to provide a conceptual and analytical focus for often overlapping concerns with economic, social, political, cultural and ecological change. In the context of increased interest in inter- and multi-disciplinary approaches, ‘regions’ remain an arena in which synthesis across disciplines – economics, geography, planning, politics and sociology – can take place. Yet recent work has raised fundamental questions about how we think about and research ‘regions’ and regional change, ‘development’, governance and regulation. First, emergent conceptual ideas have introduced new thinking about space, place and scale that interprets ‘regions’ as ‘unbounded’, relational spaces. This work has disturbed notions of ‘regions’ as bounded territories and questioned hierarchical systems of scale through more complex, multi-scalar approaches. Second, research methodology has grown in sophistication and sensitivity but remains somewhat polarised between the binaries of positivist, often quantitative, and more theoretically diverse, typically qualitative, approaches. Last, regional governance, policy and politics are wrestling with the conceptual, methodological and political complexities of new modes and geographies of governance and emergent multi-agent and multi-level institutional architectures.

    This book brings together important voices in regional studies to contribute to and reflect upon these current issues and debates. While we are at an early stage in beginning to think through what such conceptual, theoretical, methodological, governance, policy and political innovations and developments mean for regional studies, the magnitude and resonance of such issues underpin the vitality of research on the region.

    This book was published as a special issue of Regional Studies.

    1. Introduction: Whither Regional Studies?  Andy Pike

    2. Regions and Regional Uneven Development Forever? Some Reflective Comments upon Theory and Practice  Ray Hudson

    3. Beyond the Territorial Fix: Regional Assemblages, Politics and Power  John Allen and Allan Cochrane

    4. Territorial, Scalar, Networked, Connected: In What Sense a ‘Regional World’?  Gordon MacLeod and Martin Jones

    5. The Accident of the Region: A Strategic Relational Perspective on the Construction of the Region’s Significance  Arnoud Lagendijk

    6. Observational Equivalence? Regional Studies and Regional Science  Philip McCann

    7. Power in Firm Networks: What it Means for Regional Innovation Systems  Susan Christopherson and Jennifer Clark

    8. The Polycentric State: New Spaces of Empowerment and Engagement?  Kevin Morgan

    9. What Kind of Local and Regional Development and for Whom?  Andy Pike, Andrés Rodríguez-Pose and John Tomaney

    Biography

    Andy Pike is based at the Centre for Urban and Regional Studies (CURDS) at Newcastle University, UK.