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Towards a Regional Renaissance? Reconfiguring and Rescaling England's Economic Governance
135
Citations
82
References
1999
Year
Economic DevelopmentLocal Economic DevelopmentRegional Economic RestructuringRegional DevelopmentEconomic GovernanceEconomic HistoryEconomic InstitutionsSocial SciencesRegional ScalePolitical EconomyGeopoliticsPublic PolicyEconomicsEconomic ReformRegional RenaissancePolitical AppealRegional PolicyPolitical GeographyBusinessRegional PlanningPolitical Science
Recent years have witnessed a tremendous academic and political appeal to the regional scale as the key with which to rear economic and social revitalization. Learning from exemplars such as Baden Württemberg, certain proponents of a purported ‘new regionalism’ advocate that the economic and democratic deficit in less‐favoured regions may be revitalized by fostering a series of interacting social, economic and institutional networks. This paper provides a discussion of some of the more sophisticated approaches heralding a regional renaissance. These are then deployed through a case study of the restructuring and rescaling of England's economic governance in the late 1990s via the establishment of Regional Development Agencies (RDAs). Focusing on the experience of the North‐West region, their analysis reveals that, whilst useful as a form of contextualizing regional transformation and governance, the new regionalist approaches are unable to provide a rigorous framework through which to consider England's own peculiar regional ‘resurgence’. In turn, the authors call for a serious consideration of the state as a critical animateur in both structuring and scaling economic and civic life. The paper concludes that in future research, a lack of sensitivity to situated path‐dependent regional economic and political geographies may serve to reproduce the ‘fantasies’ inherent in some earlier (post‐Fordist)‘transition models'.
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