Part I. Empirical Foundations: 1. A spiky world: what came before … (the 2001 and 2009 editions of our book); 2. Geo-human interaction; 3. Empirical methods; Part II. Urban Economics: 4. Space within cities; 5. City systems; 6. The empirics of agglomeration; Part III. Geographical Economics: 7. The core model; 8. Extensions of the core model; 9. Empirics of economic geography; Part IV. Development and Policy: 10. Geography and development; 11. Policy implications.
This up-to-date third edition provides an accessible introduction to urban and geographical economics using real world examples and key models.
Steven Brakman is Professor of International Economics at the Faculty of Economics and Business at the Rijksuniversiteit Groningen. He is a research fellow of the CESifo institute in Munich, and co-editor of the Journal of Regional Science. He is academic partner of the Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy analysis, and member of the programme committee of Statistics Netherlands. Harry Garretsen is Professor of International Economics and Business at the Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, and a visiting fellow at the University of Cambridge. Garretsen has published widely in books and leading international journals on urban, geographical, international economics and also on economics and leadership. He has also been active in giving policy advice on these topics. His editorial board activities include the Journal of Economic Geography, Journal of Regional Science, Cambridge Journal of the Regions, Economy and Society, and Leadership Quarterly. Charles van Marrewijk is Professor of Economics and Head of Research at Universiteit Utrecht School of Economics, The Netherlands. He has published widely for leading international journals and publishers on spatial economics (including international, urban, regional, and geographical economics) and development economics (including economic growth, agglomeration, and globalization).
'Economic geography strikes back. After a couple of decades of easy
talk about the 'death of distance' in the age of globalization, the
promise of a future of rising living standards for all is
increasingly challenged by the resilience of geographical
disparities. By introducing students and scholars to the frontier
of urban and geographical economics, this new edition equips them
with the theoretical and empirical tools needed to make sense of
our spiky world.' Gianmarco Ottaviano, Bocconi University and the
London School of Economics and Political Science
This book is not merely a new 'New introduction to geographical
economics' but a deeply revised version of the excellent previous
material. Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk paint a sweeping
portrait of geographical and urban economics, taking into
consideration the shift in focus in the field towards cities and
empirical methods. This timely, comprehensive, and highly readable
book will be an excellent source for students and researchers in
the years to come.' Kristian Behrens, Université du Québec à
Montréal
'… this book provides the most systematic and comprehensive
analysis possible in the field of urban and regional economics …
The in-depth theoretical and empirical analysis offered makes the
book a 'must' read for anyone who intends to teach and/or do
quality research in issues of regional and urban disparities.'
Ioannis Bournakis, Regional Studies
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