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Jan Lambooy retired in October 2002. When Jan was asked how he
wanted to celebrate this occasion, he was adamant that no great
festivities should take place. Characteristically, Jan wanted just
a scientific conference so he "could learn something from it" and,
as he insisted, no great festivities. So that is what we did and a
conference was organised in Amsterdam on 25 October 2002, hosted by
the Faculty of Economics and Econometrics of the University of
Amsterdam. Friends of Jan's from academia in the Netherlands and
abroad participated and thus paid homage to Jan, both as a
scientist and as a person. We are now very proud to present this
festschrift, firstly as the palpable result of this conference and
secondly as a token of sincere respect and great affection for Jan.
Edited volumes run the danger of being a hotchpotch of
contributions on a wide variety of topics. Here, we have explicitly
focused on a central theme in contemporary economic geography and
regional science, namely the relationship between learning,
innovation and clustering. Internationally renowned scientists made
both theoretical and empirical contributions to this volume. We
think this book constitutes a broad palette of contemporary
thinking and research on the relationship between spatial
concentration and innovation and hope it will play a significant
role in future debates on this issue.
Jan Lambooy retired in October 2002. When Jan was asked how he
wanted to celebrate this occasion, he was adamant that no great
festivities should take place. Characteristically, Jan wanted just
a scientific conference so he "could learn something from it" and,
as he insisted, no great festivities. So that is what we did and a
conference was organised in Amsterdam on 25 October 2002, hosted by
the Faculty of Economics and Econometrics of the University of
Amsterdam. Friends of Jan's from academia in the Netherlands and
abroad participated and thus paid homage to Jan, both as a
scientist and as a person. We are now very proud to present this
festschrift, firstly as the palpable result of this conference and
secondly as a token of sincere respect and great affection for Jan.
Edited volumes run the danger of being a hotchpotch of
contributions on a wide variety of topics. Here, we have explicitly
focused on a central theme in contemporary economic geography and
regional science, namely the relationship between learning,
innovation and clustering. Internationally renowned scientists made
both theoretical and empirical contributions to this volume. We
think this book constitutes a broad palette of contemporary
thinking and research on the relationship between spatial
concentration and innovation and hope it will play a significant
role in future debates on this issue.
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