In response to the work of authors such as Michael Porter, the concept of regional competitiveness has become a ‘hegemonic discourse’, whereby programmes of decentralisation to subnational tiers of governance have been driven by this prerogative of embracing this hegemony of regional competitiveness. In deference to this orthodoxy, Blair’s programme of devolution and constitutional change (in the United Kingdom) was provisionally stimulated by the legitimation of politics through the settlements afforded to both Scotland and Wales
Following the 2019 general election, the Prime Minister claimed that leaving the EU would enable him...
This paper explores the economic thinking behind the UK Coalition government’s new framework for ach...
There are many studies which purport to show whether the regional policy of a particular country at ...
The ‘region’ and ‘regional change’ have been elusive ideas within political and economic geography, ...
Devolution appears to challenge the traditional regional and national hierarchies of the UK, but in ...
On coming to power the UK New Labour government made social inclusion a pillar of its mainstream pol...
Calls for devolved powers for the North of England are rooted in the economic and political dominanc...
Regions have gained a position at the forefront of the economic development policy agenda. However, ...
Professor Frank Peck of the University of Cumbria’s Centre for Regional Economic Development writes ...
Should there be an English Parliament? Or should the English regions – closer in size to the other c...
In recent debates on the regulation and governance of contemporary capitalism and its territorial fo...
Following the Scottish independence referendum, devolution for England is back of the agenda, with r...
Debates on the state of regional inequalities in the UK date back decades. And yet, recent studies ...
There are fundamental links between academic treatments of ‘economic development ’ and of the popula...
Based on insights ‘in the English field’ over the past decade, I take a brief look back at New Labou...
Following the 2019 general election, the Prime Minister claimed that leaving the EU would enable him...
This paper explores the economic thinking behind the UK Coalition government’s new framework for ach...
There are many studies which purport to show whether the regional policy of a particular country at ...
The ‘region’ and ‘regional change’ have been elusive ideas within political and economic geography, ...
Devolution appears to challenge the traditional regional and national hierarchies of the UK, but in ...
On coming to power the UK New Labour government made social inclusion a pillar of its mainstream pol...
Calls for devolved powers for the North of England are rooted in the economic and political dominanc...
Regions have gained a position at the forefront of the economic development policy agenda. However, ...
Professor Frank Peck of the University of Cumbria’s Centre for Regional Economic Development writes ...
Should there be an English Parliament? Or should the English regions – closer in size to the other c...
In recent debates on the regulation and governance of contemporary capitalism and its territorial fo...
Following the Scottish independence referendum, devolution for England is back of the agenda, with r...
Debates on the state of regional inequalities in the UK date back decades. And yet, recent studies ...
There are fundamental links between academic treatments of ‘economic development ’ and of the popula...
Based on insights ‘in the English field’ over the past decade, I take a brief look back at New Labou...
Following the 2019 general election, the Prime Minister claimed that leaving the EU would enable him...
This paper explores the economic thinking behind the UK Coalition government’s new framework for ach...
There are many studies which purport to show whether the regional policy of a particular country at ...