This study examines how far and in what way ‘Our cities are back’, as claimed by England’s Core Cities Group. It focuses on 1984-2007 employment changes for the eight Core Cities and their city regions: Birmingham, Bristol, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle, Nottingham and Sheffield. City regions are defined on a consistent functional basis and allowance is made for discontinuities in the jobs time-series. These provincial city regions are found to have suffered relatively less than London in the early 1990s recession, but then recovered more slowly to achieve their greatest rates of growth in 1998- 2002 and only then did the Core Cities outpace the rest of their city regions. Employment growth slowed after this, though their populati...
It is almost 10 years since the UK government published Towards an Urban Renaissance. This paper ass...
Thanks to everyone who attended my LSE works public lecture last Thursday. Podcast and slides are av...
This study looks at the extent to which the regeneration of Britain’s coalfields depends on links wi...
Posted by Prof Tony Champion, SERC and CURDS, Newcastle University Most people agree that our big ci...
Second-order cities are generally seen as disadvantaged places in the literature on globalisation, b...
Centre for Cities has published its Cities Outlook 2010. As in previous years, the report provides p...
New research from The Work Foundation shows that, once again, as in the last recession, low skill ci...
In the UK, the increasingly dominant assumption is that the big cities are the motor of regional eco...
What can urban policy do to improve the economic performance of Britain’s cities? Henry Overman, dir...
Durham colleagues was gratefully received. This research, although not directly funded, was undertak...
What are the necessary ingredients for a city to reverse long-term economic underperformance and mov...
This paper is concerned with regions of cities, or ‘City-Regions’ and the capacity of culture as a m...
In the UK, the increasingly dominant assumption is that the big cities are the motor of regional eco...
This study looks at the extent to which the regeneration of Britain’s coalfields depends on links wi...
In the urban resurgence accompanying the growth of the knowledge economy, second-order cities appear...
It is almost 10 years since the UK government published Towards an Urban Renaissance. This paper ass...
Thanks to everyone who attended my LSE works public lecture last Thursday. Podcast and slides are av...
This study looks at the extent to which the regeneration of Britain’s coalfields depends on links wi...
Posted by Prof Tony Champion, SERC and CURDS, Newcastle University Most people agree that our big ci...
Second-order cities are generally seen as disadvantaged places in the literature on globalisation, b...
Centre for Cities has published its Cities Outlook 2010. As in previous years, the report provides p...
New research from The Work Foundation shows that, once again, as in the last recession, low skill ci...
In the UK, the increasingly dominant assumption is that the big cities are the motor of regional eco...
What can urban policy do to improve the economic performance of Britain’s cities? Henry Overman, dir...
Durham colleagues was gratefully received. This research, although not directly funded, was undertak...
What are the necessary ingredients for a city to reverse long-term economic underperformance and mov...
This paper is concerned with regions of cities, or ‘City-Regions’ and the capacity of culture as a m...
In the UK, the increasingly dominant assumption is that the big cities are the motor of regional eco...
This study looks at the extent to which the regeneration of Britain’s coalfields depends on links wi...
In the urban resurgence accompanying the growth of the knowledge economy, second-order cities appear...
It is almost 10 years since the UK government published Towards an Urban Renaissance. This paper ass...
Thanks to everyone who attended my LSE works public lecture last Thursday. Podcast and slides are av...
This study looks at the extent to which the regeneration of Britain’s coalfields depends on links wi...