Geography

Practice and economic geography

Document Type

Article

Abstract

Economic geography has over the last decade become increasingly interested in the role of practice, conceptualised as the regularised or stabilised social actions through which economic agents organize or coordinate production, marketing, service provision, exchange and/or innovation activities. Interest in practice is most clearly manifest in a growing body of research concerned to conceptualise how the regularized social relations and interactions linking economic actors (e.g. entrepreneurs, firms) shape the nature of economies, industries, and regional development processes. However, an emphasis on social practice faces significant challenges in that it lacks conceptual coherence, a clear methodological approach, and relevance for public policy. This article critically assesses the idea that practice-oriented research might or should become a core conceptual or epistemological approach in economic geography. In doing so, we identify at least four distinct strands to economic geographical interest in practice: studies centred on institutions, social relations, governmentality and alternative economies respectively. We then argue however that this shift towards practice-oriented work is less a coherent turn than a development and diversification of longstanding strands of work within the sub-discipline. © 2010 The Authors. Journal Compilation © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Publication Title

Geography Compass

Publication Date

4-1-2010

Volume

4

Issue

4

First Page

303

Last Page

319

ISSN

1749-8198

DOI

10.1111/j.1749-8198.2009.00315.x

Keywords

economic geography

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