ABSTRACT

First published in 1998, this volume, spanning a lifetime's research, is a highly innovative first attempt at a consistent theoretical approach to the elements, structures and dynamics of the geography of agents, settlements and trade. Cause and effect are replaced by chance within constraints. Populations are substituted for unreal representative individuals, variability for uniformity, probabilistic process for unique history. Ignorance is a major factor in interpersonal and inter-areal commercial relations so that the focus is on flows of information and their effects on the efficiency of the economy or, alternatively, on changes in its information content. Recent work on spatial arrangements in many physical and social sciences is incorporated but always interpreted from an overriding geographical viewpoint. Key concepts are locational potential, distance friction, mobility, diffusion, spatial pattern and texture, adaptability, efficiency, spatial interaction and dependence. Analytic methods include autocovariance and transfer functions, areal special densities and entropy. Various forms of self-organization of economic spatial patterns are examined.

part One|66 pages

Demand in the Spatial Economy

part Two|44 pages

Agents

chapter 4|17 pages

A Spatial Analysis of Gravity Flows

chapter 5|13 pages

Factor Returns and Geography

part Three|102 pages

Occupational Structures

part Four|34 pages

Settlement Structures

part Five|1 pages

Trading Structures

chapter 12|11 pages

Geographical Specialisation and Trade

chapter 13|26 pages

Spatial Price Equilibria

chapter 16|4 pages

Spatial Trade and Factor Markets

section 2|13 pages

Settlement

chapter 22|11 pages

The Village Economy as a Hypercycle

part Seven|38 pages

Long Term Dynamics

chapter 23|29 pages

Endogenous Geographical Evolution

part |6 pages

Epilogue

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue