ABSTRACT

Drawing on the theoretical resources of institutional economics, The New Industrial Geography opens new perspectives in economic geography. In its focus on historical and geographical context, institutional embeddedness, and tacit rules and formal regulations, institutional economics is shown to be the perfect basis for understanding the profound economic and geographical changes of the last two decades, and on which also to build a new kind of industrial geography. Issues covered include: the retheorization of the geography of industrial districts; the analysis of institutional 'thickness', and the economic-geographical effects of institutional rigidity and sclerosis; the economic-geographical consequences of new regulatory bodies and policies; and the geographically situated character of institutions and regulatory frameworks, and the effects of separating them from their originating context; the development of new strategies for achieving more equitable forms of regional development.

part I|104 pages

Regions

chapter 2|31 pages

The resurgence of regional economics

Ten years later

chapter 4|24 pages

Reversing attrition?

The auto cluster in Baden-Württemberg

chapter 5|27 pages

Sticky places in slippery space

A typology of industrial districts

part II|77 pages

Regulation

chapter 6|28 pages

Harnessing the region

Changing perspectives on innovation policy in Ontario

chapter 7|21 pages

Rules as resources

How market governance regimes influence firm networks

chapter 8|26 pages

Continentalism in an era of globalization

A perspective from Canada's resource periphery

part III|112 pages

Institutions

chapter 10|13 pages

The production of industrial processes

Regions, nation states and the foundations of regulation

chapter 11|27 pages

Does nationality still matter?

The new competition and the foreign ownership question revisited

chapter 12|27 pages

Capital and creative destruction

Venture capital and regional growth in US industrialization

chapter 13|23 pages

Institutional issues for the European regions

From markets and plans to socioeconomics and powers of association