The emerging empirics of evolutionary economic geography.
Publication date
2011
Authors
Boschma, R.A.
Frenken, K.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2011
Abstract
Following last decade’s programmatic papers on Evolutionary Economic Geography, we
report on recent empirical advances and how this empirical work can be positioned
vis-a`-vis other strands of research in economic geography. First, we review studies on
the path dependent nature of clustering, and how the evolutionary perspective relates
to that of New Economic Geography. Second, we discuss research on agglomeration
externalities in Regional Science, and how Evolutionary Economic Geography
contributed to this literature with the concepts of cognitive proximity and related
variety. Third, we go into the role of institutions in Evolutionary Economic Geography,
and we relate this to the way Institutional Economic Geography tends to view
institutions. From this discussion, a number of new research challenges are derived.
Keywords
evolutionary economic geography, clusters, related variety, institutions, regional branching