Syllabus/achievement requirements

* = the article is in a compendium

@= the article is available online

How to find an article on 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.

Published May 15, 2017 9:19 AM - Last modified May 15, 2017 9:19 AM