Networks, Regional Development and Democratic Control.
(2006)
Journal Article
Hudson, R., & Hadjimichalis, C. (2006). Networks, Regional Development and Democratic Control. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 30, 858-872. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2427.2006.00687.x
All Outputs (6)
The production of institutional complemenrarity: the case of North East England. (2006)
Book Chapter
Hudson, R. (2006). The production of institutional complemenrarity: the case of North East England. In G. Wood, & P. James (Eds.), Institutions, Production and Working Life (104-122). Oxford University Press
The New Economic Geography? (2006)
Book Chapter
Hudson, R. (2006). The New Economic Geography?. In H. Lawton-Smith, & S. Bagchi-Sen (Eds.), Past, Present and Future of Economic Geography (47-55). Routledge
Firms as political actors in processes of capital accumulation and regional development (2006)
Book Chapter
Hudson, R. (2006). Firms as political actors in processes of capital accumulation and regional development. In M. Taylor, & P. Oinas (Eds.), Understanding the firm: spatial and organizational dimensions (169-188). Oxford University Press
Regional devolution and regional economic success: myths and illusions about power (2006)
Journal Article
Hudson, R. (2006). Regional devolution and regional economic success: myths and illusions about power. Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography, 88(2), 159-171. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0435-3684.2006.00212.xThe proposition that regional devolution in and of itself will lead to economic success has become deeply embedded in beliefs and policy discourses about the determinants of regional prosperity, and in turn has led to political demands for such devol... Read More about Regional devolution and regional economic success: myths and illusions about power.
On what's right and keeping left: or Why Geography still needs Marxian political economy (2006)
Journal Article
Hudson, R. (2006). On what's right and keeping left: or Why Geography still needs Marxian political economy. Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography, 38(2), 374-395. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8330.2006.00584.xRecently the value of Marxian approaches to human geography has again been called into question in the pages of Antipode. In this paper I review the reasons as to why geographers re‐discovered Marx and then, from the late 1960s, began to engage with... Read More about On what's right and keeping left: or Why Geography still needs Marxian political economy.