Recovering the social in evolutionary economic geography: alternative pathways for regional development

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40 Recovering the social in evolutionary economic geography: alternative pathways for regional development Y E A R S Globalisation in Crisis? The Urban and Regional Challenges of the Great Instability, Cambridge, July 2017 Andrew Cumbers*, Stuart Dawley**, Danny MacKinnon**, Robert McMaster* and Andy Pike** * Adam Smith Business School, University of Glasgow **Centre for Urban and Regional Development Studies (CURDS), Newcastle University

Next stage in collective project

Outline Revisiting the regional problem amidst the current post-crisis conjuncture The impasse of existing regional concepts and theories The contributions of evolutionary geographical political economy Evolutionary geographical political economy and alternative pathways for regional development Conclusions

Revisiting the regional problem I the current conjuncture crisis of democratic capitalism (Streeck) Broken, dysfunctional growth model derailing prosperity Widening social and spatial disparities people and places left behind Social and political legitimation crisis, economic populism (Brexit, Trump) and geographies of liberal metropolitan elites versus (non-?)liberal, non-elite ordinary regions Public policy concern, failure, exhaustion, uncertainty and confusion?

Revisiting the regional problem II Renewed concern with spatial inequalities a return to the old issue of combined and uneven development In what sense a (new?) regional problem? (Massey 1979)

The impasse of existing regional concepts and theories Little to say (to date) and asking the right questions? (Hadjimichalis and Hudson 2014) Stuck, trapped, unable and/or reluctant to innovate and/or revise existing frameworks for new realities Overly fixated with dynamic and successful core region cases Persistent but minority pursuit explaining the plight of ordinary / failing / lagging regions

The contributions of evolutionary geographical political economy Debt to Massey in historical perspective, geological metaphors, layering and recombination in social and spatial structures and divisions of labour Holistic, contextual, and integrated framework Connecting spatial economic evolution to broader questions of value creation and capture, agency and structure, adaptation, the state and institutional variegation, and combined and uneven development

Pathways I temporal evolution and change Episodes of change Moments for conscious and deliberative social agency and institutional intervention: Path creation Path shaping, shifting? Path managed decline, destruction, termination?

Periodisation economic change, institutions and policies: Glasgow I: Continued decline II: Stabilisation and low/slow growth III: Crisis and weak recovery Episode 1: Episode 2: Episode 3: Strategic planning in regional and sub-regional framework City localism and businessoriented policies Cityregionalism, coordination and integration Source: Evenhuis, E., Pike, A., Bailey, D., Sunley, P., Tyler, P., Martin, R. and Gardiner, B. (2017) Institutions and policies in city economic evolution: evidence from British cities, Paper for RSA Dublin, June.

Pathways II qualitative Shift from only quantitative to qualitative scrutiny of regional development What kinds of pathways and for whom? (c. Pike et al. 2007) Different definitions of regional development More inclusive? Sustainable? Progressive?

Inclusive growth and the more and better jobs gap in British cities, 2015 City Better jobs gap % More jobs gap % More + better jobs gap % Total Labour Force + Inactive but wants work Better jobs gap (000s) More jobs gap (000s) More + better jobs gap (000s) Newcastle 21% 24% 41% 749 154 182 304 Cardiff 18% 27% 40% 765 140 204 308 Manchester 20% 25% 40% 1,453 292 357 582 Liverpool 18% 25% 40% 758 140 192 303 Sheffield 19% 25% 40% 977 185 248 389 Nottingham 20% 23% 39% 517 102 120 203 Birmingham 17% 26% 39% 1,378 235 356 540 Leeds 19% 24% 39% 1,199 227 288 464 Glasgow 15% 22% 34% 455 70 102 157 London 14% 23% 34% 4,843 677 1,127 1,642 Edinburgh 18% 20% 34% 725 128 148 244 Bristol 15% 21% 32% 610 92 126 198 Total: 2,442 3,450 5,334 Source: Pike, A., Lee, N., MacKinnon, D., Kempton, L. and Iddawela, Y. (2017) Cities and Demand-side Policies for Inclusive Growth, Joseph Rowntree Foundation: York.

Evolutionary geographical political economy and alternative pathways Critique of existing pathways and their multiscalar foundations Rediscovering and articulating normative politics what kinds of pathways should we be constructing and pursuing? What are the opportunities for alternative pathways? What counter-hegemonic narratives can be constructed? Just, progressive, solidaristic and sustainable regionalism?

Conclusions Need to revisit the regional problem in the current post-crisis conjuncture Existing concepts and theories yet to engage, reluctant or (still) looking elsewhere at different questions Evolutionary geographical political economy contributions: pathways (temporal, qualitative) and politics Challenge and task to theorise, construct and articulate alternative pathways for regional development

history is never closed but maintains an open horizon towards the future. Source: Hall, S. (2011: 728) The neo-liberal revolution, Cultural Studies, 25, 6, 705-728.

Acknowledgements 40 Y E A R S www.cityevolutions.org.uk @city_evolutions