This paper puts forward a relational view of the region based upon an assemblage of political actors, some public, some private, where elements of central and local government are 'lodged' within the region, not acting above or below it. Using examples drawn from governing agencies across and beyond the South East of England, we show how a more diffuse and fragmented form of governance has given rise to a spatially discontinuous region. This is grounded in an exposition of the political assemblage that is Milton Keynes today, with its provisional, cross-cutting mix of institutional agencies, partnerships, businesses and interest groupings engaged in a 'politics of scale' exercise to fix the region
The contemporary ethos of governance in England largely stems from Conservative policy developments ...
In recent decades, regional pressures for stronger autonomy have encouraged a number of central an...
This paper examines the evolving pattern of city-regional governance in England. Following the demis...
The idea of regions as territorially fixed in some vital political sense is a stubborn conception, o...
The case for elected English regional government outside London has lost momentum, but the machinery...
What explains the strong performative of the 'region' in academic and popular perceptions? This pape...
One of the most persistent characteristics of the geography of Britain is the wide inequality that e...
Whilst undoubtedly central to academic and policy-relevant spatial analysis for over a hundred years...
This doctoral study is situated within key debates concerned with how new urban and regional spaces ...
Issues of state restructuring and rescaling are on the political agenda across Western Europe, but t...
When the history of New Labour comes to be written one of the main challenges will be to explain its...
A policy focus of the New Labour Government in the UK has been upon attempts to tackle problems of c...
Regional studies are at a vibrant conjuncture. 'Regions' continue to provide a conceptual and analyt...
In recent decades, regional pressures for stronger autonomy have encouraged a number of central and ...
Recent years have witnessed a burgeoning literature on the 'new regionalism'. Protagonists, both at ...
The contemporary ethos of governance in England largely stems from Conservative policy developments ...
In recent decades, regional pressures for stronger autonomy have encouraged a number of central an...
This paper examines the evolving pattern of city-regional governance in England. Following the demis...
The idea of regions as territorially fixed in some vital political sense is a stubborn conception, o...
The case for elected English regional government outside London has lost momentum, but the machinery...
What explains the strong performative of the 'region' in academic and popular perceptions? This pape...
One of the most persistent characteristics of the geography of Britain is the wide inequality that e...
Whilst undoubtedly central to academic and policy-relevant spatial analysis for over a hundred years...
This doctoral study is situated within key debates concerned with how new urban and regional spaces ...
Issues of state restructuring and rescaling are on the political agenda across Western Europe, but t...
When the history of New Labour comes to be written one of the main challenges will be to explain its...
A policy focus of the New Labour Government in the UK has been upon attempts to tackle problems of c...
Regional studies are at a vibrant conjuncture. 'Regions' continue to provide a conceptual and analyt...
In recent decades, regional pressures for stronger autonomy have encouraged a number of central and ...
Recent years have witnessed a burgeoning literature on the 'new regionalism'. Protagonists, both at ...
The contemporary ethos of governance in England largely stems from Conservative policy developments ...
In recent decades, regional pressures for stronger autonomy have encouraged a number of central an...
This paper examines the evolving pattern of city-regional governance in England. Following the demis...