Geography
Representing the economic geographies of 'others': Reconsidering the Global South
Document Type
Article
Abstract
This essay examines how undergraduate economic geography courses in Anglo-American institutions traditionally frame economic activities in developing regions and asserts that mainstream approaches have devalued the complexity and diversity of economic geographies in the Global South. Focusing on developmentalism as a commonly used heuristic frame, it is argued that teachers and textbooks may provide only a partial representation of economic activities in the developing world and that this can lead to the marginalization of the Global South as a context for economic geography study and research. The essay concludes with ideas about how teachers might subvert these tendencies.
Publication Title
Journal of Geography in Higher Education
Publication Date
11-1-2006
Volume
30
Issue
3
First Page
439
Last Page
448
ISSN
0309-8265
DOI
10.1080/03098260600927369
Keywords
developing regions, developmentalism, economic geography, representation
Repository Citation
Murphy, James T., "Representing the economic geographies of 'others': Reconsidering the Global South" (2006). Geography. 416.
https://commons.clarku.edu/faculty_geography/416