This short commentary responds to James et al.’s report on the employment of economic geographers within in departments of business and management in UK universities. An initial ambivalence about the numbers of economic geographers working outside the sub-discipline has been replaced by growing concerns over the supply of early career economic geographers, the immediate pressures of the Research Excellence Framework and the growth and financial significance of business schools within the UK university sector. Collective action and collaboration by the remaining economic geographers is encouraged to stem the tide
In the lifetime of the Journal of Economic Geography geographers and economists have followed diverg...
Because the economy is not found as an empirical object among other worldly things, in order for it ...
This paper explores tensions that emerge from the injunction to make progress in geographical knowle...
This short commentary responds to James et al.’s report on the employment of economic geographers wi...
This Exchanges commentary is concerned with the health of Economic Geography as a sub-discipline, an...
This Exchanges commentary is concerned with the health of Economic Geography (EG) as a sub-disciplin...
In this article, we discuss the contribution that Geographers make to academic, policy, debate and p...
The study of economic geography is thriving. After decades of arguing for the importance of underst...
Recent Exchanges have focused on economic geography\u27s purported \u27decline\u27 and its patriarch...
© 2018, © 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. In this paper we draw attent...
This article considers whether the growing theoretical and methodological diversity or pluralistic n...
The reaction of economic geographers to the World Bank's World Development Report 2009 – Reshaping E...
Between the first two decades of the 21st century, the gentrification of the academic subject of Geo...
This paper considers the ways geographers (proper) and (geographical) economists approach the study ...
This article also appears in: Borders, borderlands and bordering.Ten years ago, the decision was tak...
In the lifetime of the Journal of Economic Geography geographers and economists have followed diverg...
Because the economy is not found as an empirical object among other worldly things, in order for it ...
This paper explores tensions that emerge from the injunction to make progress in geographical knowle...
This short commentary responds to James et al.’s report on the employment of economic geographers wi...
This Exchanges commentary is concerned with the health of Economic Geography as a sub-discipline, an...
This Exchanges commentary is concerned with the health of Economic Geography (EG) as a sub-disciplin...
In this article, we discuss the contribution that Geographers make to academic, policy, debate and p...
The study of economic geography is thriving. After decades of arguing for the importance of underst...
Recent Exchanges have focused on economic geography\u27s purported \u27decline\u27 and its patriarch...
© 2018, © 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. In this paper we draw attent...
This article considers whether the growing theoretical and methodological diversity or pluralistic n...
The reaction of economic geographers to the World Bank's World Development Report 2009 – Reshaping E...
Between the first two decades of the 21st century, the gentrification of the academic subject of Geo...
This paper considers the ways geographers (proper) and (geographical) economists approach the study ...
This article also appears in: Borders, borderlands and bordering.Ten years ago, the decision was tak...
In the lifetime of the Journal of Economic Geography geographers and economists have followed diverg...
Because the economy is not found as an empirical object among other worldly things, in order for it ...
This paper explores tensions that emerge from the injunction to make progress in geographical knowle...