ON A ROAD TO NOWHERE: A COMMENT ON AMENITIES AND URBAN AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference abstract in proceedings › Research
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ON A ROAD TO NOWHERE: A COMMENT ON AMENITIES AND URBAN AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT. / Winther, Lars; Hansen, Høgni Kalsø.
Regional Responses and Global Shifts: Actors, Institutions and Organisations. 2010. p. 210-211.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference abstract in proceedings › Research
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TY - ABST
T1 - ON A ROAD TO NOWHERE:
AU - Winther, Lars
AU - Hansen, Høgni Kalsø
N1 - Monday 24th May-Wednesday 26th May 2010
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Currently (urban) amenities as growth drivers are being given much attention in urban and regional studies and it is transmitted into urban and regional policies too. The basic claim is that amenities attract economic activity in terms of firms and labour and especially highly skilled knowledge workers, talents and creative class members that seek to optimise their utility function of amenities. In policy terms local authorities, municipalities, are taking the arguments serious and they are advancing the development of amenities even in small towns and peripheral regions outside the main city-regions as a new universal remedy to secure futuregrowth and prosperity or at least to prevent stagnation and decline. In that sense amenities are seen as a tool to 211 secure skill provision. The amenity-growth paradigm does offer new perspectives for some cities and regions but as a universal remedy for urban and regional growth it has, as many of it redecessors, its shortcomings. Hence, we are critical of the underlying tenets of the amenity-growth paradigm but the critique is sustained with respect and sympathy for its contributions to urban and regional studies too. First of all, it has brought back a vital debate on urban and regional growth including the distinction between localisation economies and urbanisation economies. Secondly, it has pin pointed the value of labour, human capital, in the new knowledge based economy in terms of knowledge workers etc. Thirdly, it has drawn attention to labour migration and labour mobility underlying structural changes in the economy. The basic tenet has, however, recently beencontested theoretically and empirically. Theoretically it remains within the limits of neoclassical economics and hence restrained by the classic pitfalls of being a meteristic, agent based science dominated by ahistorical models and reversible processes. Further, little empirical evidence has been pushed forward to support the amenity-growth linkage. On the contrary, new evidence reveals that for instance labour movements are driven by jobs and not amenities. The paper explores the bulk of literature that in recent years have followed in theaftermath of the cultural turn in urban economic geography. Based on the review of the most important contributions to the field we discuss how culture economy is used as a locomotive for regional planning regardless of regional context.
AB - Currently (urban) amenities as growth drivers are being given much attention in urban and regional studies and it is transmitted into urban and regional policies too. The basic claim is that amenities attract economic activity in terms of firms and labour and especially highly skilled knowledge workers, talents and creative class members that seek to optimise their utility function of amenities. In policy terms local authorities, municipalities, are taking the arguments serious and they are advancing the development of amenities even in small towns and peripheral regions outside the main city-regions as a new universal remedy to secure futuregrowth and prosperity or at least to prevent stagnation and decline. In that sense amenities are seen as a tool to 211 secure skill provision. The amenity-growth paradigm does offer new perspectives for some cities and regions but as a universal remedy for urban and regional growth it has, as many of it redecessors, its shortcomings. Hence, we are critical of the underlying tenets of the amenity-growth paradigm but the critique is sustained with respect and sympathy for its contributions to urban and regional studies too. First of all, it has brought back a vital debate on urban and regional growth including the distinction between localisation economies and urbanisation economies. Secondly, it has pin pointed the value of labour, human capital, in the new knowledge based economy in terms of knowledge workers etc. Thirdly, it has drawn attention to labour migration and labour mobility underlying structural changes in the economy. The basic tenet has, however, recently beencontested theoretically and empirically. Theoretically it remains within the limits of neoclassical economics and hence restrained by the classic pitfalls of being a meteristic, agent based science dominated by ahistorical models and reversible processes. Further, little empirical evidence has been pushed forward to support the amenity-growth linkage. On the contrary, new evidence reveals that for instance labour movements are driven by jobs and not amenities. The paper explores the bulk of literature that in recent years have followed in theaftermath of the cultural turn in urban economic geography. Based on the review of the most important contributions to the field we discuss how culture economy is used as a locomotive for regional planning regardless of regional context.
M3 - Conference abstract in proceedings
SN - 978-1-897721-36-0
SP - 210
EP - 211
BT - Regional Responses and Global Shifts:
Y2 - 24 May 2010 through 26 May 2010
ER -
ID: 20051754