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Originally published in 2005. This book examines how regional
industries use different networks on various geographical scales in
order to withstand increasing competition in a globalising world.
It argues that new forms of global governance of networked
industries are emerging, in particular in those areas that have
only recently been incorporated into the global economy such as
Eastern Europe, Asia and Southern Africa. The book addresses a
number of issues, including the different forms of institutional
arrangements that contribute to the formation of heterogeneous
global industrial networks. It also raises the issue of national
institutions that still matter in network formation. The focus of
the book is on how to improve regional and sectoral competitiveness
in a global context and it suggests this is best achieved by a
close analysis of global linkages, an evolutionary perspective on
processes taking place, and a more differentiated view on
globalisation.
Originally published in 2005. This book examines how regional
industries use different networks on various geographical scales in
order to withstand increasing competition in a globalising world.
It argues that new forms of global governance of networked
industries are emerging, in particular in those areas that have
only recently been incorporated into the global economy such as
Eastern Europe, Asia and Southern Africa. The book addresses a
number of issues, including the different forms of institutional
arrangements that contribute to the formation of heterogeneous
global industrial networks. It also raises the issue of national
institutions that still matter in network formation. The focus of
the book is on how to improve regional and sectoral competitiveness
in a global context and it suggests this is best achieved by a
close analysis of global linkages, an evolutionary perspective on
processes taking place, and a more differentiated view on
globalisation.
This book is the product of four years of collaborative work within
the framework of the European Science Foundation's Regional and
Urban Restructuring in Europe (RURE) programme. With one exception,
all of the chapters have been prepared by participants in RURE -
the exception being that commissioned from Conti and Enrietti on
Fiat and Italy to provide a fuller coverage of changes in the main
automobile producing companies and countries of Europe. A - perhaps
the - central theme around which the RURE programme was conceived
is that the restructuring of the production system lies at the
heart of the changing map of Europe. Equally, it continues to be
the case that the automobile industry lies at the cutting edge of
the search for viable new models of production. Some eighty years
ago the automobile industry occupied a pivotal position in the
transition from craft to mass production - indeed "Fordism" came to
denote not just a particular micro-economic model of production
organisation in the factory but a macro-scale model of economic
development, characterized by a particular pattern of relations
between mass production, mass consumption and national state
regulation. From the late 1960s, however, it became increasingly
clear that Fordism as a macro-scale model of advanced capitalist
development was reaching its limits.
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