overview
new or old?
size & shape
globalisation
law
the state
innovation
volatility
models
offshoring
m-commerce
infotainment
services
advocacy
voodoo
logistics
factories
retail
creatives
complexes
consumers
carbon
ecologies
bankruptcy
nodes
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nodes
Contrary to claims that location and distance no longer
matter, geography is of critical importance for the infrastructure
that underpins development and for the social networks
that bring together -
- capital,
including business angels,
venture capital managers
and banks
- facilitators
such as lawyers and accountants
- facilities
such as incubators
- academic
researchers
- entrepreneurs
- technical
support staff
We
thus see supposedly 'spaceless'
new economy industries clustering in specific geographical
locations, in particular New York, California and Bangalore.
An ongoing challenge for government - and source of wealth
for consultants - has been to identify what makes those
locations attractive, how their attractiveness can be
maintained or how they can be cloned
points of entry
Key works are Annalee Saxenian's classic Regional
Advantage: Culture & Competition In Silicon Valley
& Route 128 (Cambridge: Harvard Uni Press 1996),
The Dynamic Firm: The Role of Technology, Strategy,
Organization and Regions (Oxford: Oxford Uni Press
1998) edited by Alfred Chandler, Peter Hagstrom &
Orjan Solvell, Matthew Zook's 1998 paper
on The Web of Consumption: The Spatial Organization
of the Internet Industry in the US and the Mysteries
of the Region: Knowledge Dynamics In Silicon Valley
paper
by John Brown & Paul Duguid.
Perspectives are provided in
Making Silicon Valley: Innovation and the Growth of
High Tech, 1930–1970 (Cambridge: MIT Press,
2006) by Christophe Lécuyer,
Chris Benner's Work in the New Economy: Flexible Labor
Markets in Silicon Valley (Oxford: Blackwell 2002)
and Silicon Valley, Women, and the California Dream:
Gender, Class, and Opportunity in the Twentieth Century
(Stanford: Stanford Uni Press 2003) by Glenna Matthews.
John
Markoff's What The Dormouse Said: How the 60s Counterculture
Shaped the Personal Computer Industry (New York:
Viking 2005) offers a revisionist - and for us unconvincing
- account of the birth of the PC.
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