Persistent poverty, economic decay, and lack of opportunities are at the root of considerable discontent in declining and lagging-behind areas the world over. Poor development prospects and an increasing belief that these places have ‘no future’ – as economic dynamism has been posited to be increasingly dependent on agglomeration economies – have led many of these so-called ‘places that don’t matter’ to revolt against the status quo. The revolt has come via an unexpected source: the ballot-box in a wave of political populism with strong territorial, rather than social foundations. I will argue that the populist wave is challenging the sources of existing well-being in both the less-dynamic and the more prosperous areas and that better, rath...
The ‘place or people?’ dilemma is a recurring refrain in local economic development. The contested q...
This article examines the adoption, by the New Labour government, of a mixed communities approach to...
Although three centuries of industrialisation and growth have led to unimaginably better lives for m...
Persistent poverty, economic decay, and lack of opportunities are at the root of considerable discon...
Populism is on the rise, especially in the developed world. It has gone from being a force to be rec...
The recent wave of populism has focused attention on ‘left behind’ places as hotspots of discontent....
This article explores an alternative model of local and regional economic development, specifically ...
This article is the first of three reviews in which economic geography is viewed through the lens of...
‘Place-based explanations’ of politics in the U.K. tell sweeping narratives about ‘Two Englands’, or...
Addressing the spectre of the council estate, Mooney establishes that "there's no escaping that what...
For decades regeneration programmes in England targeted areas where spatial concentrations of povert...
For decades regeneration programmes in England targeted areas where spatial concentrations of povert...
This chapter situates the book’s analyses of the Northern Powerhouse, devolution and Northern econom...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
The problems of so-called 'left-behind' places - typically former industrial regions have figured pr...
The ‘place or people?’ dilemma is a recurring refrain in local economic development. The contested q...
This article examines the adoption, by the New Labour government, of a mixed communities approach to...
Although three centuries of industrialisation and growth have led to unimaginably better lives for m...
Persistent poverty, economic decay, and lack of opportunities are at the root of considerable discon...
Populism is on the rise, especially in the developed world. It has gone from being a force to be rec...
The recent wave of populism has focused attention on ‘left behind’ places as hotspots of discontent....
This article explores an alternative model of local and regional economic development, specifically ...
This article is the first of three reviews in which economic geography is viewed through the lens of...
‘Place-based explanations’ of politics in the U.K. tell sweeping narratives about ‘Two Englands’, or...
Addressing the spectre of the council estate, Mooney establishes that "there's no escaping that what...
For decades regeneration programmes in England targeted areas where spatial concentrations of povert...
For decades regeneration programmes in England targeted areas where spatial concentrations of povert...
This chapter situates the book’s analyses of the Northern Powerhouse, devolution and Northern econom...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
The problems of so-called 'left-behind' places - typically former industrial regions have figured pr...
The ‘place or people?’ dilemma is a recurring refrain in local economic development. The contested q...
This article examines the adoption, by the New Labour government, of a mixed communities approach to...
Although three centuries of industrialisation and growth have led to unimaginably better lives for m...