SGO4601 - Pensum/læringskrav

* = in compendium. Compendium will be available at Kopiutsalget at the bookstore Akademika at Blindern. Please bring your student card.

@ = articles are available online through Bibsys' subscriptions on e-journal databases for employees and students. To access the articles it is necessary to use a computer in the UiO network. This is because the UiO subscription access is controlled by IP-address

How to find an article from the reading list

1. Discourses of economic geography

1.1 Overwiev

*Scott, A. J., (2000): "Economic geography: the great half-century". In: Clark, G. et al (ed): The Oxford Handbook in Economic geography. Oxford, Oxford University Press, pp. 18-44.

@Hess, M. (2004): "’Spatial’ relationships? Towards a reconceptualization of embeddedness." Progress in Human Geography, 28, pp. 165-186. Available online

1.2 Evolutionary economic geography

*Boschma, R. & Martin, R. 2010.  The aims and scope of evolutionary economic geography. Boschma, R. & Martin, R. (eds.) The Handbook of Evolutionary Economic Geography, 3−43. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham.  40 sider

@ Boschma, R and Frenken, K. (2006) "Why is economic geography not an evolutionary science? Towards an evolutionary economic geography." Journal of Economic Geography, 6, 273-302. Available online

*Essletzbitchler, J. & Rigby, D.L. 2010. Generalized Darwinism and evolutionary economic geography. Boschma, R. & Martin, R. (eds.) The Handbook of Evolutionary Economic Geography, 43–62. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 19 sider

*Frenken, K., Oort van, F., Verburg, T. (2007): Related Variety, Unrelated Variety and Regional Economic Growth. Regional Studies 41, pp. 685-697.

*MacKinnon, D., Cumbers, A., Pike, A., Birch, K. and McMaster, R. (2009): Evolution in Economic Geography: Institutions, Political Economy, and Adaptation. Economic Geography, 85, pp. 129-150.

*Stam, E. & Lambooy, J. (2012), Entrepreneurship, Knowledge, Space, and Place: Evolutionary Economic Geography meets Austrian Economics, in David Emanuel  Andersson (ed.) The Spatial Market Process (Advances in Austrian Economics, Volume 16), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, pp. 81-103. 22s.

@ Martin, R. and Sunley, P. (2007): Complexity thinking and evolutionary economic geography. Journal of Economic Geography, 7, 573-601. Available online

*Wicken, O. 2009. The Layers of National Innovation Systems: The Historical Evolution of a National Innovation System in Norway. Fagerberg, J., Mowery, D.C. & Verspagen, B. (eds.) Innovation, Path Dependency and Policy. The Norwegian Case, 33–60. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

 

2. INSTITUTIONS and REGIONS

*North, D. C., (1991): “Institutions.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 5, (1), pp 97–112. 15s.

@ Hodgson, G. M., (2006): “What are Institutions?” Journal of Economic Issues XL (1) pp 1-23. 23s. Available online

*David, P. A., (2007): “Path Dependence, its critics and the quest for “historical economics.” In: The Evolution of Economic Institutions. Edward Elgar. Cheltenham, pp. 120–144. 24s.

@Gertler, M. 2010. Rules of the Game: The Place of Institutions in Regional Economic Change’, Regional Studies 44, 1–15. Available online

@Martin, R. and Sunley, P. (2006). Path dependence and regional economic evolution. Journal of Economic Geography, 6, 395-437. Available online

@Martin, R. 2012. (Re)Placing Path Dependence: A Response to the Debate. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 36, 179-192. Available online

@Martin, R. 2010. Roepke Lecture in Economic Geography—Rethinking Regional Path Dependence: Beyond Lock-in to Evolution. Economic Geography 86, 1−27. Available online

 

3. The greening of economic geography?

*Angel, D. (2000). Environmental innovation and regulation. In: Clark, G. et al (ed): The Oxford Handbook in Economic geography. Oxford, Oxford University Press, pp. 607-624.

@Bridge, G. (2009). Material Worlds: Natural Resources, Resource Geography and the Material Economy. Geography Compass, 3/3, 1217-1244.

@Bailey I, Caprotti F, 2014, "The green economy: functional domains and theoretical directions of enquiry" Environment and Planning A 46(8) 1797 –1813.16 sider. Available online.

@Gibson, C. and Warren, A. (2016). Resource-Sensitive Global Production Networks: Reconfigured Geographies of Timber and Acoustic Guitar Manufacturing. Economic Geography, 92, 4, 430-454.

*Spaargaren, G., Mol, A.P.J. and Buttel, F.H. (2006). Introduction: Governing Environmental Flows in Global Modernity. In Gert Spaargaren, Arthur P. J. Mol, and Hans Bruyninckx (eds.): Governing environmental flows: global challenges to social theory. The MIT Press, Cambridge-Mass. 37 sider.

 

4. Sustainability transitions

@Affolderbach, J. (2011). Environmental Bargains: Power Struggles and Decision Making over British Columbia's and Tasmania's Old-Growth Forests. Economic Geography, vol. 87, 181-206. 25 sider Available online

@Aylett A, (2013) Networked urban climate governance: neighborhood-scale residential solar energy systems and the example of Solarize Portland. Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy 31(5) 858 – 875. 17 sider. Available online

@Blay-Palmer, A. and Donald, B. (2006) A Tale of Three Tomatoes: The New Food Economy in Toronto, Canada. Economic Geography, vol. 82, 383-399. 17 sider. Available online

@Carvalho, L., Mingardo, G. and Van Haaren, J. (2012). Green urban transport policies and cleantech innovations: Evidence from Curitiba, Göteborg and Hamburg. European Planning Studies, vol. 20, 375-396.  21 sider. Available online

@Coenen, L., Benneworth, P. and Truffer, B. (2012). Toward a spatial perspective on sustainability transitions. Research Policy, 41, 968-979. 11s. Available online

@De Laurentis, C. (2013). Innovation and Policy for Bioenergy in the UK: A Co-Evolutionary Perspective. Regional Studies, DOI:10.1080/00343404.2013.834320. 15 sider. Available online

@Dewald, U. and Truffer, B. (2012).The Local Sources of Market Formation: Explaining Regional Growth Differentials in German Photovoltaic Markets. European Planning Studies, vol. 20, 397-420. 23sider. Available online

@Gibbs, D og O’Neill, K. (2014). Rethinking sociotechnical transitions and green entrepreneurship: the potential for transformative change in the green building sector. Environment and Planning A 46(5) 1088 – 1107. 20s. Available online

@Haarstad, H. and Rusten, G. (2016). The challenges of greening energy: policy/industry dissonance at the Mongstad refinery, Norway. Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy, 34, 340-355. Available online.

@Hvarregaard, M. T., Kjeldsen, C. and Noe, E. (2016). It's never too late to join the revolution! - Enabling new modes of production in the contemporary danish food system. European Planning Studies. Availbel online

@Jørgensen, U. (2012). Mapping and navigating transitions—The multi-level perspective compared with arenas of development. Research Policy, 41, 996-1010. 15s. Available online

@Karnøe, P. and Garud, R. (2012). Path Creation: Co-creation of Heterogeneous Resources in the emergence of the Danish Wind Turbine Cluster. European Planning Studies, vol. 20, 733-752. 20s. Available online

@Kvam, G.T., Bjørkhaug, H. and Pedersen, A.C. (2017). How relationships can influence an organic firm's network identity. European Planning Studies. Available online.

@Lovio, R. and Kivimaa, P. (2012). Comparing alternative Path Creation Frameworks in the context of Emerging Biofuel Fields in the Netherlands, Sweden and Finland. European Planning Studies, vol. 20, 773-790. 17s. Available online

@Prudham, S. (2009). Pimping climate change: Richard Branson, global warming, and the performance of green capitalism. Environment and Planning A 41(7) 1594 – 1613. 20s. Available online

@Simmie, J. (2012). Path Dependence and New Path Creation in Renewable Technologies. European Planning Studies, vol 20, 729-731. Available online

 

Totalt  705s.

 

To download the articles from computers outside the UiO network it is necessary to connect to the UiO network by VPN client. Some ejournal databases do not facilitate a direct link to the PDF-file. In such cases the link leads to the issue-index or the journal from where the correct article can be located and downloaded. Available curriculum articles on the internet are an advantage in the sense that required reading will be available to the students sooner than compendiums, and the students may choose to read the text on the screen. Students pay for print-outs if exceeding their print quota, but this is also cheaper than printed compendium per page

Published Apr. 21, 2015 12:50 PM - Last modified Mar. 28, 2017 4:41 PM