TY - JOUR
T1 - Territorial, scalar, networked, connected: in what sense a ‘regional world’?
AU - Macleod, Gordon
AU - Jones, Martin Russell
N1 - Macleod, G., Jones, M. (2007). Territorial, Scalar, Networked, Connected: In What Sense a ‘Regional World’? Regional Studies, 41 (9), 1177-1191.
PY - 2007
Y1 - 2007
N2 - Territorial, scalar, networked, connected: in what sense a ‘regional world’?, Regional Studies 41, 1177–1191. Whilst undoubtedly central to academic and policy-relevant spatial analysis for over a hundred years now, ‘the region’ has continued to be an elusive category: its various meanings and the implications therein frequently being challenged and modified through paradigmatic shifts in such spatial analysis. Today, amid what is undoubtedly a period of dramatic economic transformation, political restructuring and sociocultural change, a range of often multi-disciplinary approaches to the regional concept exist, informing us, variously, how regions can become competitive economic zones within a global economy, strategic political territories in a complex system of multi-level governance, cultural spaces forged through a politics of identity, or – in an approach that departs quite radically from conventional territorially based readings – spaces constituted out of the spatiality of flow and relational networks of connectivity. Drawing on the experience of a post-devolution UK, this paper critically assesses the respective merits of these various conceptualizations of the region, and offers some remarks about the challenges confronting contemporary regional studies.
AB - Territorial, scalar, networked, connected: in what sense a ‘regional world’?, Regional Studies 41, 1177–1191. Whilst undoubtedly central to academic and policy-relevant spatial analysis for over a hundred years now, ‘the region’ has continued to be an elusive category: its various meanings and the implications therein frequently being challenged and modified through paradigmatic shifts in such spatial analysis. Today, amid what is undoubtedly a period of dramatic economic transformation, political restructuring and sociocultural change, a range of often multi-disciplinary approaches to the regional concept exist, informing us, variously, how regions can become competitive economic zones within a global economy, strategic political territories in a complex system of multi-level governance, cultural spaces forged through a politics of identity, or – in an approach that departs quite radically from conventional territorially based readings – spaces constituted out of the spatiality of flow and relational networks of connectivity. Drawing on the experience of a post-devolution UK, this paper critically assesses the respective merits of these various conceptualizations of the region, and offers some remarks about the challenges confronting contemporary regional studies.
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/2160/8858
U2 - 10.1080/00343400701646182
DO - 10.1080/00343400701646182
M3 - Article
SN - 0034-3404
VL - 41
SP - 1177
EP - 1191
JO - Regional Studies
JF - Regional Studies
IS - 9
ER -