Regional Worlds : Advancing the Geography of Regions
Regional Worlds : Advancing the Geography of Regions
This special issue gives insight into the current theoretical discussion and empirical research on the idea of the “region” in geography, whereby regions are conceptualized in connection with territorial and relational approaches and are considered on different scales.
The special issue on “Regional Worlds,” edited by Martin Jones and Anssi Paasi, combines various current theoretical perspectives on the region and accompanies this with empirical examples from Europe, Africa, and North America. The issue attempts to address the still-current significance of the region in geography and breaks down old dichotomous conceptualizations of “region” as either territorial or relational, in order to unite the conceptualizations. The authors point out that regions are constructed according to various disciplinary perspectives on different scales (sub-national, national, supranational, cross-border). They contextualize regions in connection with globalization, border regions, agency/advocacy, social construction, and historical processes of development and change.
Table of Contents:
- Introduction: Regional World(s): Advancing the Geography of Regions, Martin Jones ; Anssi Paasi
- Bounded vs. Open Regions, and Beyond: Critical Perspectives on Regional Worlds and Words, Alexander B. Murohy; J. Nicolas Entrikin; Anssi Paasi; Gordon Macleod; Andrew E. G. Jonas and Ray Hudson
- Arguing with Regions, John A. Agnew
- Conceptualizing the Region – In What Sense Relational? Krisztina Varró; Arnoud Lagendijk
- New Localities, Martin Jones; Michael Woods
- Experienced Regions and Borders: The Challenge for Transactional Approaches, Maano Ramudsindela
- Configuring the New ‘Regional World’: On being Caught between Territory and Networks, John Harrison
- Crafting the Region: Creative Industries and Practices of Regional Space, Nicola J. Thomas; David C. Harvey; harriet Hawkins
- Unusual Regionalism in Northern Europe: The Barents Region in the Making, Kaj Zimmerbauer
- Between Regional Spaces and Spaces of Regionalism: Cross-border Region Building in the Spanish ‘State of the Autonomies’ Jacob García-Álvarez; Juan-Manuel Trillo-Sanatamaría
- (Small) Differences that (Still) Matter? Cross-Border Regions and Work Place Governance in the Southern Ontario and US Great Lakes Automotive Industry, Tod D. Rutherford; John Holmes
The special issue “Regional Worlds” sees itself as a contribution to the further development of the geography of the region. It combines various current theoretical perspectives on the region with empirical examples from Europe, Africa, and America. It was developed as a synthesis of the Association of American Geographers conference held in Boston, Massachusetts in 2008.
It raises the question of how regions can be understood and conceptualized in the context of globalization, governance, identity, territory, social constructivism, and border crossing. The authors describe regions as things that have grown historically and are constantly changing in form and meaning. Keywords such as “competition,” “resilience,” and “structure” are becoming more important in the current description of regions. The issue presents both intellectual and practical aspects of Regional Studies and aims to broaden the theoretical and empirical understanding of regions through individual contributions.
The aim of the special issue is not to look at regions dichotomously either through the “relational approach” or through the “territorial approach”, but to bring these two approaches together. The authors start from the assumption that regions today are involved in open, network-like and cross-border, global relations as well as being bound, locally rooted and territorially limited. Regions are therefore “in motion and simultaneously fixed” (3).
An introduction by the editors is followed by brief reflections on the openness (relational approach) and restriction (territorial approach) of regions. This is followed by eight articles analyzing and conceptualizing regions from different empirical and theoretical contexts.
The contributions deal with “the production and reproduction of both regional spaces and spaces of regionalism” (3). The authors explore questions such as how to interpret the importance of regions, how to conceptualize regions in relation to location, territory, locality, etc., how to overcome the separation between relational and territorial interpretation of regions, how regions emerge and come into being, what borders of regions are and what socio-political functions they have, what it means to understand regions as socially constructed, what role the context plays in regional emergence and how this context changes the understanding of regions. Regions are considered here from a political perspective (e.g. the EU as a region), from an economic perspective (e.g. supranational trade regions) or from a socio-cultural perspective (e.g. subnational cultural region).
The focus of some of the contributions is rather on theory building while others show a rich empiricism. Agnew’s article, for example, argues that in the humanities the views of the region must be adapted to the respective context, since there cannot be a single regional concept due to the complexity of the contexts. Jones and Woods rethink the concept of locality and try to get a better understanding of society, space, and region. García-Álvarez and Trollo-Santamaría deal with the case study of cross-border autonomous communities in Spain and Portugal in the context of globalization, while Rutherford and Holmes deal with changes in workplace management in cross-border regions using the example of the US/Canadian automotive industry in the Great Lake region. Altogether, the contributions show innovative approaches to conceptualizing and contextualizing regions and manage to lend scientific and practical relevance to the idea of the region once again.
The articles in this special issue draw a varied, diverse picture of regions as a geographical category. They make it clear that the region is not obsolete, but still a powerful, social, cultural, economic, and politically relevant spatial entity that is constantly changing historically and (re-)produced again and again through socio-political processes. Regions are to be understood as territorial, as specifically limited localities and materialities, but also relationally as parts of supra-regional networks, whose borders become blurred and overlap. Regions can be viewed on different scales from local to global, from sub-national, national to supranational, depending on which perspective is taken. The contributions promote the theoretical-conceptual understanding of regions and show their practical reality by means of detailed empirical case studies. The editors postulate the importance of regions and continue to attribute great importance to the concept for geography and other disciplines dealing with them.
Martin Jones and Anssi Paasi
Anssi Paasi
ISBN 13: 978-1-138-85260-0