Dynamics in economic geography
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Understanding spatial socio-economic inequalitiesGlobal transformations such as globalization and climate change influence the economic fate of people and places very differently. Also, places differ in terms of the opportunities they offer to firms and the people living there. As a result, there are important socio-economic inequalities across space. Economic Geography gives you the tools to understand such inequalities. The aim of this book is to provide students and other interested readers with an up-to-date introduction to economic geography, applied to the Netherlands and beyond. It provides an overview of what economic geography studies and summarizes and explains its main approaches. As such, the book is broad in scope and it serves as a starting point for more in-depth exploration. Ton van Rietbergen studied Social Geography of Developing Countries. After a short period at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, he has worked as a lecturer-researcher at the Faculty of Geographical Sciences of Utrecht University since 1986. Initially focusing mainly on commuter mobility issues, he wrote dozens of articles about, amongst others, the traffic jam problem and the vast sums of money spent on the express tram to the Uithof. Gradually, he focused more on economic geography and in particular the pros and cons of globalization. He obtained his doctorate in 1999 with a dissertation on the internationalization of the insurance Sector, which was soon followed by the publication of the book Internationalisering van de dienstensector (Internationalization of the Service Sector), with Jeroen Bosman and Marc de Smidt. Since 2002 he has been involved in updating and renewing Dynamics in Economic Geography (4th ed., 2023). His other publications include Globalisering: ramp of redding? (Globalization: Disaster or salvation?) (2020) and Alles in Drievoud, a personal account about his triplets, as well as numerous articles in Dutch newspapers, such as de Volkskrant, NRC Handelsblad, Algemeen Dagblad en Trouw.Sierdjan Koster is Adjunct Professor of Economic Geography and Labour Market Dynamics at the University of Groningen (Faculty of Spatial Sciences). He studies regional socio-economic disparities asking how the spatial decisions of people, firms and government counter or reproduce these. Within this context, a broad scope of interests and research themes has emerged, including regional well-being, political discontent, transport geography, entrepreneurship, migration and regional branding and firms? perceptions. His PhD dissertation addressed the role of entrepreneurship and spin-off formation in regional economic growth. Teaching is important to Sierdjan and, for over a decade, he has been coordinating the core courses in Economic Geography at both the bachelor?s and master?s level. He is currently head of the Economic Geography department of the Faculty of Spatial Sciences.
Understanding spatial socio-economic inequalitiesGlobal transformations such as globalization and climate change influence the economic fate of people and places very differently. Also, places differ in terms of the opportunities they offer to firms and the people living there. As a result, there are important socio-economic inequalities across space. Economic Geography gives you the tools to understand such inequalities. The aim of this book is to provide students and other interested readers with an up-to-date introduction to economic geography, applied to the Netherlands and beyond. It provides an overview of what economic geography studies and summarizes and explains its main approaches. As such, the book is broad in scope and it serves as a starting point for more in-depth exploration. Ton van Rietbergen studied Social Geography of Developing Countries. After a short period at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, he has worked as a lecturer-researcher at the Faculty of Geographical Sciences of Utrecht University since 1986. Initially focusing mainly on commuter mobility issues, he wrote dozens of articles about, amongst others, the traffic jam problem and the vast sums of money spent on the express tram to the Uithof. Gradually, he focused more on economic geography and in particular the pros and cons of globalization. He obtained his doctorate in 1999 with a dissertation on the internationalization of the insurance Sector, which was soon followed by the publication of the book Internationalisering van de dienstensector (Internationalization of the Service Sector), with Jeroen Bosman and Marc de Smidt. Since 2002 he has been involved in updating and renewing Dynamics in Economic Geography (4th ed., 2023). His other publications include Globalisering: ramp of redding? (Globalization: Disaster or salvation?) (2020) and Alles in Drievoud, a personal account about his triplets, as well as numerous articles in Dutch newspapers, such as de Volkskrant, NRC Handelsblad, Algemeen Dagblad en Trouw.Sierdjan Koster is Adjunct Professor of Economic Geography and Labour Market Dynamics at the University of Groningen (Faculty of Spatial Sciences). He studies regional socio-economic disparities asking how the spatial decisions of people, firms and government counter or reproduce these. Within this context, a broad scope of interests and research themes has emerged, including regional well-being, political discontent, transport geography, entrepreneurship, migration and regional branding and firms? perceptions. His PhD dissertation addressed the role of entrepreneurship and spin-off formation in regional economic growth. Teaching is important to Sierdjan and, for over a decade, he has been coordinating the core courses in Economic Geography at both the bachelor?s and master?s level. He is currently head of the Economic Geography department of the Faculty of Spatial Sciences.
Bol PartnerWhat is happening where? And why there? These are the geographer's main questions. The economic geographer mainly focuses in this connection on the location and regional distribution of producers and consumers. Locational preferences and regional development are traditionally explained on the basis of spatial cost and profit differences among countries, regions and cities. There are however also other explanations such as the role of the regional culture, the effectiveness of planological policy and the evolutionary interaction between producers and their regional environment. Dynamics in Economic Geography surveys the major economic geography theories. These theories pertain to a wide range of practical topics such as the producers' selection of locations, the role of the state in promoting prosperity in a region, the differences in the competitive strength of countries and regions and the influence of city marketing on the economic growth of cities. The theory is illustrated by any number of examples. The book is very suitable for college and university students and teachers. Oedzge Atzema, Ton van Rietbergen, Jan Lambooy and Sjef van Hoof teach economic geography at the Faculty of Geosciences of Utrecht University.
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