'This book is a remarkable and often inspirational tour de force. Martin Jones confidently moves between theories of political economy and stories of regional and urban policy, using each to inform the other. He brings the uneven geographies of England to life, showing how they are reproduced in practice, while also offering the prospect of alternative futures.' - Allan Cochrane, The Open University, UK
Offering a geographical political economy analysis, this book explores the mechanisms, institutions, and spaces of subnational economic development. Martin Jones innovatively examines how policy-makers frame problems and offer intervention solutions in different cities and regions.
Drawing on different approaches to state intervention, neoliberalism, crisis and contradiction theories, and notions of depoliticisation, this book explains policy failure and how it is impacted by flux surrounding economic development. With constant changes to legislation, institutional initiatives, and ministerial responsibility, local and regional economic development is shown to be at a critical crossroads.
Theoretically innovative and empirically focused, this timely book is a must-read for researchers and policy-makers of urban geography, regional development, political economy and public policy.
Author(s): Martin Jones
Publisher: Edward Elgar
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: x+300
Front Matter
Copyright
Contents
Preface and acknowledgements
1. Introduction: geographical political economy, neoliberalism, and the crisis space impedimenta state
PART I The new localism
2. Government and governance
3. Urban crisis and contradiction
4. Zones of welfare and workfare
PART II The new regionalism
5. Regional Development Agencies
6. Spaces of regionalism
7. City-region building
PART III The new new localism
8. Locality making
9. Devolution dynamics
10. Devolution depoliticisation
PART IV Alternatives to neoliberalism
11. Developing inclusive growth
12. Beyond withered local states
Postscript: the Stoke road to Brexit
References
Index