Syndetics omslagsbild
Bild från Syndetics

Regional Research Frontiers - Vol. 1 : Innovations, Regional Growth and Migration.

Av: Medverkande: Materialtyp: TextSerie: Utgivningsuppgift: Cham : Springer International Publishing AG, 2017Datum för upphovsrätt: ©2017Utgåva: 1st edBeskrivning: 1 online resource (348 pages)Innehållstyp:
  • text
Medietyp:
  • computer
Bärartyp:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783319505473
Ämnen: Genre/form: DDK-klassifikation:
  • 338.9
Onlineresurser:
Innehåll:
Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- About the Editors -- Contributors -- Part I Technology, Innovation, Gender, and Entrepreneurship -- 1 Opportunities and Challenges of Spatially Distributed Innovation Imaginariums -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Conventional Wisdom -- 1.2.1 Empirical Challenges to Conventional Wisdom -- 1.2.2 Conceptual Challenges to Conventional Wisdom -- 1.3 A More Comprehensive View of Innovation -- 1.4 From Locale to Community -- 1.5 Opportunities and Challenges of Spatially Distributed Imaginariums -- References -- 2 Exploring Innovation Gaps in the American Space Economy -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Background -- 2.3 Empirical Analysis -- 2.3.1 Workforce -- 2.3.2 Entrepreneurship -- 2.3.3 Patents -- 2.3.4 Overall Innovation -- 2.3.5 Overall Productivity -- 2.3.6 Metropolitan Context -- 2.3.7 Empirical Results -- 2.4 Challenges to Regional Science -- 2.4.1 Creativity -- 2.4.2 New Industries -- 2.4.3 Transformation of Industries -- 2.4.4 Modeling Interconnectivity Agglomeration -- 2.5 Summary and Conclusion -- References -- 3 Future Shock: Telecommunications Technology and Infrastructure in Regional Research -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Infrastructure Deployment -- 3.2.1 The Future of Infrastructure Deployment -- 3.3 The Shifting Needs and Uses of Telecommunications Systems -- 3.3.1 The Future of IoE and Telecommunications Systems -- 3.4 Future Technologies -- 3.4.1 Holograms -- 3.4.2 Brain-to-Brain Communication -- 3.5 Discussion and Conclusion -- 3.5.1 A Regional Perspective -- References -- 4 Mobility and Technology Research: From the Industrial Revolution to Flying Vehicles in 2050 -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Mobility and the Industrial Revolution up to 1900 -- 4.2.1 Technology -- 4.2.2 Research and Modeling -- 4.3 Mobility in the Twentieth Century -- 4.3.1 Technological Change.
4.3.2 Research and Modeling -- 4.3.3 Integration and Fusion of Technology -- 4.4 Mobility Going Forward into the Twenty-First Century -- 4.4.1 Technological Change -- 4.4.2 Integration and Fusion of Technologies -- 4.4.3 Flying Vehicles and Beam Technology -- 4.4.4 Research and Modeling -- 4.5 Discussion and Conclusions -- 4.5.1 Discussion -- 4.5.2 Conclusions -- References -- 5 Entrepreneurship, Growth, and Gender -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Entrepreneurship and Growth -- 5.3 Women Entrepreneurs as the New Pioneers of Innovative Entrepreneurialism -- 5.4 Pioneers of the Twenty-first Century -- References -- Part II Regional Growth, Regional Forecasts, and Policy -- 6 Agglomeration and Automation in the Twenty-First Century: Prospects for Regional Research -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 The New Age of Automation -- 6.3 Agglomeration -- 6.4 Agglomeration and Productivity -- 6.5 Determinants of Agglomeration -- 6.6 Labor Pooling and Matching -- 6.7 Learning and Knowledge Spillovers -- 6.8 Input Sharing and Specialization -- 6.9 Agglomeration Measures -- 6.10 Conclusion -- References -- 7 Designing Policies to Spur Economic Growth: How Regional Scientists Can Contribute to Future Policy Development and Evaluation -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Heterogeneous Effects of Government Policies -- 7.3 Issues Regarding Current and Future Data -- 7.4 Considerations of Methodologies Used in Regional Science -- 7.5 Conclusions and Recommendations for the Future -- References -- 8 Regional Science Research and the Practice of Regional Economic Forecasting: Less Is Not More -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Research on Forecasting Methods -- 8.2.1 Dependence Between Sectors -- 8.2.2 Spatial Interdependencies -- 8.2.3 The Roles of Supply Versus Demand in Population Growth -- 8.2.4 Labor Market Closures -- 8.2.5 The Role of Housing -- 8.2.6 Forecasting Employment by Occupation.
8.3 Research to Supplement Regional Model Forecasts -- 8.3.1 Benchmarking Against Other Regions -- 8.3.2 Sub-state Analysis -- 8.3.3 Industry Trends -- 8.4 Summary and Conclusions -- References -- 9 Energy for Regional Development -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Energy Research -- 9.3 Energy Policy Mechanisms: A New Approach for Policymakers -- 9.4 The Next Fifty Years in Regional Energy Economics Research -- 9.5 Conclusion -- References -- 10 Regional Perspectives on Public Health -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Inequalities -- 10.3 Determinants -- 10.4 Development Processes -- 10.5 Mobility -- 10.6 Detection, Surveillance and Monitoring -- 10.7 Provision and Access -- 10.8 Location Modeling -- 10.9 Conclusion -- References -- 11 New Approaches to Gender in Regional Science -- 11.1 Areas of Likely Future Focus -- 11.1.1 Gender, Income and Inequality -- 11.1.2 Household Location, Composition, and Influences -- 11.1.3 Composition of Neighborhoods and Social Change -- 11.1.4 Innovation and Its Regional Environment -- 11.2 Conclusions -- References -- 12 Identifying Sleeping Beauties in the Lore of Regional Science -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Evolution of Scientific Literature and the Concept of Sleeping Beauties -- 12.3 Citation Indexing Databases and Data Extraction -- 12.3.1 Using Burst Analysis to Identify Potential Sleeping Beauties -- 12.3.2 Use of Multimode Network and Text Analytics to Detect Sleeping Beauties -- 12.4 Network Analysis and Sleeping Beauties -- 12.5 Conclusions -- 12.6 Future of Research in Regional Science -- References -- 13 Regional Policy and Fiscal Competition -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Regional Policies -- 13.3 Fiscal Competition -- 13.4 Comments on the Current State of the Literature -- 13.4.1 A Simple Fiscal Competition Model -- 13.4.2 Assumptions and Characterization of Results -- 13.4.2.1 Strategic Complementarity.
13.4.2.2 Strategic Substitutability -- 13.4.2.3 Homogeneous or Heterogeneous Agents -- 13.4.2.4 Ownership of Capital -- 13.4.2.5 Relationship Between Private and Public Goods -- 13.4.2.6 Multidimensional Policy Space -- 13.4.2.7 Symmetric Equilibria -- 13.4.2.8 Agglomeration Economies -- 13.4.2.9 Other Assumptions -- 13.4.3 Summary of Findings -- 13.5 Guidelines for Future Research -- References -- 14 Back to the Future: Lösch, Isard, and the Role of Money and Credit in the Space-Economy -- 14.1 Introduction -- 14.2 Crisis? What Crisis? -- 14.3 Lösch and Isard as Monetary Thinkers -- 14.3.1 August Lösch's Schumpeterian Heritage -- 14.3.2 Walter Isard and the Influence of the Àmerican Keynes' -- 14.4 Integrating Lösch and Isard: Elements of a Synthesis -- 14.4.1 Monetary Hierarchy and Spatial Non-neutrality in the Löschian System -- 14.4.2 The Flow-of-Funds Perspective and Isardian Monetary Space -- 14.4.3 Linking Regional Moneyflows and the Hierarchy of Money -- 14.5 The Future -- References -- Part III Diasters and Resilience -- 15 Economic Resilience in Regional Science: Research Needs and Future Applications -- 15.1 Introduction -- 15.2 Defining Economic Resilience -- 15.2.1 Basic Concepts -- 15.2.2 Resilience at Various Scales -- 15.2.3 An Operational Metric -- 15.3 Spatial Dimensions of Resilience -- 15.3.1 Business Location -- 15.3.2 Spatial Dimensions and People -- 15.4 Resilience, Adaptation and Sustainability -- 15.5 Future Research -- 15.5.1 Solidifying the Foundations of Regional Economic Resilience -- 15.5.2 Exploring New Areas -- References -- 16 Disaster and Regional Research -- 16.1 Disaster Impact Analysis and Regional Science -- 16.2 Introducing the World Disaster Impact Simulation System -- 16.2.1 Seamlessness -- 16.2.2 Comprehensiveness -- 16.2.3 Adaptability -- 16.3 WDISS Technical Notes.
16.3.1 Analytical Framework and Theoretical Underpinnings -- 16.3.2 Modeling Scheme -- 16.3.3 Methodological Elements -- 16.4 Brief History of WDISS Development: Regional Scientists at the Helm -- References -- 17 Regional Sustainability and Resilience: Recent Progress and Future Directions -- 17.1 Introduction -- 17.2 Defining and Measuring Regional Sustainability and Resilience -- 17.2.1 Sustainability -- 17.2.2 Resilience -- 17.3 Future Research Directions, Opportunities and Challenges -- 17.3.1 Open Economies and Spatial Interdependence -- 17.3.2 Integrated Modeling of Economic and Environmental Systems -- 17.3.3 Welfare-Based Assessment -- 17.3.4 Synergies and Trade-Offs Between Sustainability and Resilience -- 17.4 Conclusions -- References -- Part IV Migration, Demography, and Human Capital -- 18 Directions in Migration Research -- 18.1 Introduction -- 18.2 Classifying Migrations -- 18.3 New Migrations, New Questions -- 18.3.1 Natural vs. Structural Migrations -- 18.3.2 Domestic Structural Migrations -- 18.3.2.1 Environmental Disasters -- 18.3.2.2 Oppression, Civil Unrest, and War -- 18.3.2.3 Domestic Structural Migrations in Response to Economic Changes -- 18.3.3 International Migration, in General -- 18.3.3.1 Sending Regions -- 18.3.3.2 Receiving Regions -- 18.3.4 Political International Migrations: Refugees -- 18.3.5 Environmental International Migrations -- 18.4 Conclusions -- References -- 19 Human Capital Research in an Era of Big Data: Linking People with Firms, Cities and Regions -- 19.1 Introduction -- 19.2 Introducing Big Data to Regional Science: Potential, Sources, Problems and Opportunities -- 19.2.1 Big Data: Big Potential? -- 19.2.2 Big Data: Big Sources? -- 19.2.3 Big Data: Big Problems? -- 19.2.4 Big Data: Big Opportunities? -- 19.3 Conclusion: Where Does Big Data Fit in the Regional Science Agenda? -- References.
20 The View from Over the Hill: Regional Research in a Post-Demographic Transition World.
Inga fysiska exemplar för denna post

Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- About the Editors -- Contributors -- Part I Technology, Innovation, Gender, and Entrepreneurship -- 1 Opportunities and Challenges of Spatially Distributed Innovation Imaginariums -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Conventional Wisdom -- 1.2.1 Empirical Challenges to Conventional Wisdom -- 1.2.2 Conceptual Challenges to Conventional Wisdom -- 1.3 A More Comprehensive View of Innovation -- 1.4 From Locale to Community -- 1.5 Opportunities and Challenges of Spatially Distributed Imaginariums -- References -- 2 Exploring Innovation Gaps in the American Space Economy -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Background -- 2.3 Empirical Analysis -- 2.3.1 Workforce -- 2.3.2 Entrepreneurship -- 2.3.3 Patents -- 2.3.4 Overall Innovation -- 2.3.5 Overall Productivity -- 2.3.6 Metropolitan Context -- 2.3.7 Empirical Results -- 2.4 Challenges to Regional Science -- 2.4.1 Creativity -- 2.4.2 New Industries -- 2.4.3 Transformation of Industries -- 2.4.4 Modeling Interconnectivity Agglomeration -- 2.5 Summary and Conclusion -- References -- 3 Future Shock: Telecommunications Technology and Infrastructure in Regional Research -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Infrastructure Deployment -- 3.2.1 The Future of Infrastructure Deployment -- 3.3 The Shifting Needs and Uses of Telecommunications Systems -- 3.3.1 The Future of IoE and Telecommunications Systems -- 3.4 Future Technologies -- 3.4.1 Holograms -- 3.4.2 Brain-to-Brain Communication -- 3.5 Discussion and Conclusion -- 3.5.1 A Regional Perspective -- References -- 4 Mobility and Technology Research: From the Industrial Revolution to Flying Vehicles in 2050 -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Mobility and the Industrial Revolution up to 1900 -- 4.2.1 Technology -- 4.2.2 Research and Modeling -- 4.3 Mobility in the Twentieth Century -- 4.3.1 Technological Change.

4.3.2 Research and Modeling -- 4.3.3 Integration and Fusion of Technology -- 4.4 Mobility Going Forward into the Twenty-First Century -- 4.4.1 Technological Change -- 4.4.2 Integration and Fusion of Technologies -- 4.4.3 Flying Vehicles and Beam Technology -- 4.4.4 Research and Modeling -- 4.5 Discussion and Conclusions -- 4.5.1 Discussion -- 4.5.2 Conclusions -- References -- 5 Entrepreneurship, Growth, and Gender -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Entrepreneurship and Growth -- 5.3 Women Entrepreneurs as the New Pioneers of Innovative Entrepreneurialism -- 5.4 Pioneers of the Twenty-first Century -- References -- Part II Regional Growth, Regional Forecasts, and Policy -- 6 Agglomeration and Automation in the Twenty-First Century: Prospects for Regional Research -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 The New Age of Automation -- 6.3 Agglomeration -- 6.4 Agglomeration and Productivity -- 6.5 Determinants of Agglomeration -- 6.6 Labor Pooling and Matching -- 6.7 Learning and Knowledge Spillovers -- 6.8 Input Sharing and Specialization -- 6.9 Agglomeration Measures -- 6.10 Conclusion -- References -- 7 Designing Policies to Spur Economic Growth: How Regional Scientists Can Contribute to Future Policy Development and Evaluation -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Heterogeneous Effects of Government Policies -- 7.3 Issues Regarding Current and Future Data -- 7.4 Considerations of Methodologies Used in Regional Science -- 7.5 Conclusions and Recommendations for the Future -- References -- 8 Regional Science Research and the Practice of Regional Economic Forecasting: Less Is Not More -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Research on Forecasting Methods -- 8.2.1 Dependence Between Sectors -- 8.2.2 Spatial Interdependencies -- 8.2.3 The Roles of Supply Versus Demand in Population Growth -- 8.2.4 Labor Market Closures -- 8.2.5 The Role of Housing -- 8.2.6 Forecasting Employment by Occupation.

8.3 Research to Supplement Regional Model Forecasts -- 8.3.1 Benchmarking Against Other Regions -- 8.3.2 Sub-state Analysis -- 8.3.3 Industry Trends -- 8.4 Summary and Conclusions -- References -- 9 Energy for Regional Development -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Energy Research -- 9.3 Energy Policy Mechanisms: A New Approach for Policymakers -- 9.4 The Next Fifty Years in Regional Energy Economics Research -- 9.5 Conclusion -- References -- 10 Regional Perspectives on Public Health -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Inequalities -- 10.3 Determinants -- 10.4 Development Processes -- 10.5 Mobility -- 10.6 Detection, Surveillance and Monitoring -- 10.7 Provision and Access -- 10.8 Location Modeling -- 10.9 Conclusion -- References -- 11 New Approaches to Gender in Regional Science -- 11.1 Areas of Likely Future Focus -- 11.1.1 Gender, Income and Inequality -- 11.1.2 Household Location, Composition, and Influences -- 11.1.3 Composition of Neighborhoods and Social Change -- 11.1.4 Innovation and Its Regional Environment -- 11.2 Conclusions -- References -- 12 Identifying Sleeping Beauties in the Lore of Regional Science -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Evolution of Scientific Literature and the Concept of Sleeping Beauties -- 12.3 Citation Indexing Databases and Data Extraction -- 12.3.1 Using Burst Analysis to Identify Potential Sleeping Beauties -- 12.3.2 Use of Multimode Network and Text Analytics to Detect Sleeping Beauties -- 12.4 Network Analysis and Sleeping Beauties -- 12.5 Conclusions -- 12.6 Future of Research in Regional Science -- References -- 13 Regional Policy and Fiscal Competition -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Regional Policies -- 13.3 Fiscal Competition -- 13.4 Comments on the Current State of the Literature -- 13.4.1 A Simple Fiscal Competition Model -- 13.4.2 Assumptions and Characterization of Results -- 13.4.2.1 Strategic Complementarity.

13.4.2.2 Strategic Substitutability -- 13.4.2.3 Homogeneous or Heterogeneous Agents -- 13.4.2.4 Ownership of Capital -- 13.4.2.5 Relationship Between Private and Public Goods -- 13.4.2.6 Multidimensional Policy Space -- 13.4.2.7 Symmetric Equilibria -- 13.4.2.8 Agglomeration Economies -- 13.4.2.9 Other Assumptions -- 13.4.3 Summary of Findings -- 13.5 Guidelines for Future Research -- References -- 14 Back to the Future: Lösch, Isard, and the Role of Money and Credit in the Space-Economy -- 14.1 Introduction -- 14.2 Crisis? What Crisis? -- 14.3 Lösch and Isard as Monetary Thinkers -- 14.3.1 August Lösch's Schumpeterian Heritage -- 14.3.2 Walter Isard and the Influence of the Àmerican Keynes' -- 14.4 Integrating Lösch and Isard: Elements of a Synthesis -- 14.4.1 Monetary Hierarchy and Spatial Non-neutrality in the Löschian System -- 14.4.2 The Flow-of-Funds Perspective and Isardian Monetary Space -- 14.4.3 Linking Regional Moneyflows and the Hierarchy of Money -- 14.5 The Future -- References -- Part III Diasters and Resilience -- 15 Economic Resilience in Regional Science: Research Needs and Future Applications -- 15.1 Introduction -- 15.2 Defining Economic Resilience -- 15.2.1 Basic Concepts -- 15.2.2 Resilience at Various Scales -- 15.2.3 An Operational Metric -- 15.3 Spatial Dimensions of Resilience -- 15.3.1 Business Location -- 15.3.2 Spatial Dimensions and People -- 15.4 Resilience, Adaptation and Sustainability -- 15.5 Future Research -- 15.5.1 Solidifying the Foundations of Regional Economic Resilience -- 15.5.2 Exploring New Areas -- References -- 16 Disaster and Regional Research -- 16.1 Disaster Impact Analysis and Regional Science -- 16.2 Introducing the World Disaster Impact Simulation System -- 16.2.1 Seamlessness -- 16.2.2 Comprehensiveness -- 16.2.3 Adaptability -- 16.3 WDISS Technical Notes.

16.3.1 Analytical Framework and Theoretical Underpinnings -- 16.3.2 Modeling Scheme -- 16.3.3 Methodological Elements -- 16.4 Brief History of WDISS Development: Regional Scientists at the Helm -- References -- 17 Regional Sustainability and Resilience: Recent Progress and Future Directions -- 17.1 Introduction -- 17.2 Defining and Measuring Regional Sustainability and Resilience -- 17.2.1 Sustainability -- 17.2.2 Resilience -- 17.3 Future Research Directions, Opportunities and Challenges -- 17.3.1 Open Economies and Spatial Interdependence -- 17.3.2 Integrated Modeling of Economic and Environmental Systems -- 17.3.3 Welfare-Based Assessment -- 17.3.4 Synergies and Trade-Offs Between Sustainability and Resilience -- 17.4 Conclusions -- References -- Part IV Migration, Demography, and Human Capital -- 18 Directions in Migration Research -- 18.1 Introduction -- 18.2 Classifying Migrations -- 18.3 New Migrations, New Questions -- 18.3.1 Natural vs. Structural Migrations -- 18.3.2 Domestic Structural Migrations -- 18.3.2.1 Environmental Disasters -- 18.3.2.2 Oppression, Civil Unrest, and War -- 18.3.2.3 Domestic Structural Migrations in Response to Economic Changes -- 18.3.3 International Migration, in General -- 18.3.3.1 Sending Regions -- 18.3.3.2 Receiving Regions -- 18.3.4 Political International Migrations: Refugees -- 18.3.5 Environmental International Migrations -- 18.4 Conclusions -- References -- 19 Human Capital Research in an Era of Big Data: Linking People with Firms, Cities and Regions -- 19.1 Introduction -- 19.2 Introducing Big Data to Regional Science: Potential, Sources, Problems and Opportunities -- 19.2.1 Big Data: Big Potential? -- 19.2.2 Big Data: Big Sources? -- 19.2.3 Big Data: Big Problems? -- 19.2.4 Big Data: Big Opportunities? -- 19.3 Conclusion: Where Does Big Data Fit in the Regional Science Agenda? -- References.

20 The View from Over the Hill: Regional Research in a Post-Demographic Transition World.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2025. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

Licensed e-book