In recent debates on the regulation and governance of contemporary capitalism and its territorial form, there is an emerging consensus that successful economic development is contingent on a movement away from the nation-state and policy interventions at the national scale toward subnational institutional frameworks and supports. In effect, both an 'institutional turn' and a 'scalar turn' appear to be occurring, through which the heterogeneity of economic growth may be explored. The author scrutinises these claims by examining what is becoming known as 'new regionalist' orthodoxy in economic development. This orthodoxy is particularly powerful because its concerns for resolving economic and democratic deficit by harnessing the regional scal...
Amid the near frenzied exaltation of economic globalization and a purported decline of the nation st...
The English Regional Development Agencies (RDAs) are an uneasy halfway house between a standard quan...
Recent academic debates have suggested that the capacity of any given territory to embed increasingl...
In recent debates on the regulation and governance of contemporary capitalism and its territorial fo...
Recent years have witnessed a tremendous academic and political appeal to the regional scale as the ...
Recent years have witnessed a tremendous academic and political appeal to the regional scale as the ...
At what scale should regional development policy be administered? Indeed, should economic leadership...
Partnerships between business, third sector organizations and communities have become an increasingl...
This doctoral study is situated within key debates concerned with how new urban and regional spaces ...
The establishment of Regional Development Agencies (RDAs) in the English regions will bring about an...
This paper adopts a critical regionalist perspective to bring new insights into the drivers of stat...
This paper adopts a critical regionalist perspective to bring new insights into the drivers of stat...
This paper adopts a critical regionalist perspective to bring new insights into the drivers of stat...
This paper adopts a critical regionalist perspective to bring new insights into the drivers of stat...
This paper adopts a critical regionalist perspective to bring new insights into the drivers of stat...
Amid the near frenzied exaltation of economic globalization and a purported decline of the nation st...
The English Regional Development Agencies (RDAs) are an uneasy halfway house between a standard quan...
Recent academic debates have suggested that the capacity of any given territory to embed increasingl...
In recent debates on the regulation and governance of contemporary capitalism and its territorial fo...
Recent years have witnessed a tremendous academic and political appeal to the regional scale as the ...
Recent years have witnessed a tremendous academic and political appeal to the regional scale as the ...
At what scale should regional development policy be administered? Indeed, should economic leadership...
Partnerships between business, third sector organizations and communities have become an increasingl...
This doctoral study is situated within key debates concerned with how new urban and regional spaces ...
The establishment of Regional Development Agencies (RDAs) in the English regions will bring about an...
This paper adopts a critical regionalist perspective to bring new insights into the drivers of stat...
This paper adopts a critical regionalist perspective to bring new insights into the drivers of stat...
This paper adopts a critical regionalist perspective to bring new insights into the drivers of stat...
This paper adopts a critical regionalist perspective to bring new insights into the drivers of stat...
This paper adopts a critical regionalist perspective to bring new insights into the drivers of stat...
Amid the near frenzied exaltation of economic globalization and a purported decline of the nation st...
The English Regional Development Agencies (RDAs) are an uneasy halfway house between a standard quan...
Recent academic debates have suggested that the capacity of any given territory to embed increasingl...