302 Pages
    by Routledge

    302 Pages 25 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Creative industries have become fundamental in signalling the economic wellbeing of cities and urban regions. Workers who are attracted to the sector tend to have strong preferences when it comes to the neighbourhoods they want to live in, with factors such as job availability and urban amenities playing a large part in their decision.



    Skills and Cities analyses these factors and looks at the implications for urban and regional policy across a range of European cities. Drawing conclusions from the Netherlands and Scandinavian cities Copenhagen and Helsinki, this book sheds new light on the debate about the importance of jobs and urban amenities for attracting high-skilled employees. This edited collection brings together international literature and individual residential experiences from different cities, presenting policy simulations and highlighting the differences between urban and suburban groups. Subsequent chapters discuss the location preference and settlement process of international migrants and students in an attempt to understand what it is that attracts highly-skilled workers to a particular area. This book concludes by expertly drawing together the key issues surrounding the residential behaviour of highly educated workers and students.



    This collection will be of interest to researchers and policy makers in urban planning, as well as Postgraduate students researching housing preferences.

    Part One 1. Skills and cities; an introductory framework Sako Musterd, Marco Bontje and Jan Rouwendal 2. Housing and amenities as attracting factors for cities and their regions; a literature review Bart Sleutjes 3. Residential sorting of creative knowledge workers in four European knowledge cities Bart Sleutjes Part Two 4. Housing and location preferences of higher educated workers in The Netherlands; an introduction Marco Bontje, Sako Musterd and Jan Rouwendal 5. ‘The’ creative class does not exist: contrasting residential preferences of creative and technical workers in Amsterdam and Eindhoven Willem R. Boterman and Marco Bontje 6. Sorting models of household location and urban amenities Mark van Duijn, Jan Möhlmann, Ismir Mulalic and Jan Rouwendal 7. Integration and policy simulations Jasper Dekkers, Jan Möhlmann and Jan Rouwendal Part Three 8. Housing and location preferences of higher educated international migrants in The Netherlands; an introduction Jan Rouwendal, Sako Musterd and Marco Bontje 9. Stated residential preferences of highly-skilled international migrants Bart Sleutjes and Willem R. Boterman 10. International students and the Netherlands Or Levkovich, Jan Rouwendal and Carla Sá 11. Location choices of highly educated foreign workers; the importance of urban amenities Or Levkovich and Jan Rouwendal 12. Revealed residential preference of international migrants working in creative and knowledge intensive industries; the settlement process Bart Sleutjes and Sako Musterd Part Four 13. Skills and Cities; Jobs and Amenities Sako Musterd, Marco Bontje and Jan Rouwendal

    Biography

    Sako Musterd is Professor of Urban Geography at the Centre for Urban Studies of the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands.





    Marco Bontje is Assistant Professor at the Centre for Urban Studies of the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands.





    Jan Rouwendal is Professor at the Department of Spatial Economics of VU University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

    ‘Starting from a revisited concept of the Florida ‘creative class’, the book analyses location preferences of creative industries workers and highly qualified human resources in Europe (or North Europe) for urban development and spatial planning in large European cities.’ — Francesco Capone, PhD, University of Florence, Italy.

    'This book presents a fascinating collection of empirical insights into the residential preferences of knowledge workers and the role of amenities for their locational choices. It thereby fosters an empirically grounded debate on agglomeration advantages in knowledge societies.' — Prof. Dr. Ilse Helbrecht, Humboldt University, Germany. 

    'Over the past decades, scholars have forcefully debated whether skilled workers are attracted to cities because of job opportunities or amenities. This landmark book marks the latest developments in research on skills and cities, with a special emphasis on stated and revealed locational preferences of highly-educated workers and their implications for urban development. This impressive volume contains a large amount of empirical chapters by prominent scholars in the field, and provides an excellent and balanced view on one of the hottest and highly-debated topics in urban and economic geography in the last decades.' — Ron Boschma, Utrecht University, the Netherlands; Lund University, Sweden.