Elisabete Martins

Sixth International Workshop on "Geographical Analysis,
Urban Modeling, Spatial Statistics"

GEOG-AN-MOD 11
http://www.unibas.it/utenti/murgante/geog_an_mod_11/index.html
in conjunction with 

The 2011 International Conference on Computational
Science and its Applications (ICCSA 2011)
June 20th  - June 23th, 2011
University of Cantabria, Santander, Spain.
http://www.iccsa.org/

Description
During the past decades the main problem in geographical analysis was the lack of spatial data availability. Nowadays the wide diffusion of electronic devices containing geo-referenced information generates a great production of spatial data. Volunteered geographic information activities (e.g. Wikimapia, OpenStreetMap), public initiatives (e.g. Spatial Data Infrastructures, Geo-portals) and private projects (e.g. Google Earth, Microsoft Virtual Earth, etc.) produced an overabundance of spatial data, which, in many cases, does not help the efficiency of decision processes. The increase of geographical data availability has not been fully coupled by an increase of knowledge to support spatial decisions. The inclusion of spatial simulation techniques in recent GIS software favoured the diffusion of these methods, but in several cases led to the mechanism based on which buttons have to pressed without having geography or processes in mind. Spatial modelling , analytical techniques and geographical analyses are therefore required in order to analyse data and to facilitate the decision process at all levels, with a clear identification of the geographical information needed and reference scale to adopt. Old geographical issues can find an answer thanks to new methods and instruments, while new issues are developing, challenging the researchers for new solutions. This workshop aims at contributing to the development of new techniques and methods to improve the process of knowledge acquisition.


The programme committee especially requests high quality submissions on the following Conference Themes :
Geostatistics and spatial simulation;
Agent-based spatial modelling; 
Cellular automata spatial modelling; 
Spatial statistical models;
Space-temporal modelling;
Space-temporal modelling;
Environmental Modelling; 
Geovisual analytics, geovisualisation, visual exploratory data analysis; 
Visualisation and modelling of track data; 
Spatial Optimization; 
Interaction Simulation Models; 
Data mining, spatial data mining; 
Spatial Data Warehouse and Spatial OLAP; 
Integration of Spatial OLAP and Spatial data mining; 
Spatial Decision Support Systems;
Spatial Multicriteria Decision Analysis; 
Spatial Rough Set; 
Spatial extension of Fuzzy Set theory; 
Ontologies for Spatial Analysis; 
Urban modeling; 
Applied geography; 
Spatial data analysis; 
Dynamic modelling; 
Simulation, space-time dynamics, visualization and virtual reality.
Each paper will be independently reviewed by 3 programme committee members. Their individual scores will be evaluated by a small sub-committee and result in one of the following final decisions: accepted, or accepted on the condition that suggestions for improvement will be incorporated, or rejected. Notification of this decision will take place on March 2011.
Individuals and groups should submit complete papers (10 to 16 pages).
Accepted contributions will be published in the Springer-Verlag Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) volumes.

Authors Guideline
Please adhere strictly to the formatting provided in the template to prepare your paper and refrain from modifying it.

The submitted paper must be camera-ready and formatted according to the rules of LNCS. For formatting information, see the publisher's web site

(http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0).

Submission implies the willingness of at least one of the authors to register and present the paper.

Submission
papers should be submitted at: http://ess.iccsa.org/ please don't forget to select " Geographical Analysis, Urban Modeling, Spatial Statistics GEOG-AN-MOD 11" workshop from the drop-down list of all workshops.
Papers accepted to " Geographical Analysis, Urban Modeling, Spatial Statistics GEOG-AN-MOD 11" will be published in Springer-Verlag Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series.
Extended version of previous GEOG-AN-MOD papers have been included in five special issues:
  • Transactions on Computational Science Journal.

  • Murgante B., Borruso G., Lapucci A. (2009) "Geocomputation and Urban Planning" Studies in Computational Intelligence , Vol. 176. Springer-Verlag, Berlin.

  • Murgante B., Borruso G., Lapucci A. (2011) "Environmental geocomputation for sustainable development" Studies in Computational Intelligence. Springer-Verlag, Berlin

  • International Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Information Systems (IJAEIS), Special Issue On: "Analysing, Modelling and Visualizing Spatial Environmental Data" Guest Editors:  Beniamino Murgante, University of Basilicata, Italy - Mikhail Kanevski, University of Lausanne, Switzerland - Antonino Marvuglia, University College Cork, Ireland - Maurizio Cellura, University of Palermo, Italy

  • Borruso G., Bertazzon S., Favretto A. Murgante B., Torre C. (2011) “Geographic Information Analysis for Sustainable Development and Economic Planning: New Technologies” IGI Global

Important dates

28 February 2011: Deadline for full paper submission
18 March  2011: Notification of acceptance
15 April 2011: Deadline for Camera Ready Papers
June 20-23, 2011: ICCSA 2011 Conference

 

Beniamino Murgante
_____________________________

Beniamino Murgante, PhD
L.I.S.U.T. - D.A.P.I.T. - Facoltà di Ingegneria
Università degli Studi della Basilicata 
10, Viale dell’Ateneo Lucano
85100 - Potenza - Italy 
tel. +39-0971-205125
fax +39-0971-205185 
Mobile: +393204238518
Skype: beniamino.murgante
e-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
url:Â http://www.unibas.it/utenti/murgante/Benny.html

CALL FOR PAPERS
Special Issue of the Journal of International Business Studies
THE MULTINATIONAL IN GEOGRAPHIC SPACE

Special Issue Editors

  • Ulf Andersson, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark
  • Sjoerd Beugelsdijk, University of Groningen, The Netherlands
  • Ram Mudambi, Temple University, USA
  • Srilata Zaheer, University of Minnesota, USA

Deadline for submission: November 18, 2011

Tentative publication date: Spring 2013

Introduction

Although the impact of the changing strategy of MNEs on global economic geography is beginning to receive attention in the literature, IB scholars’ understanding of space remains relatively underdeveloped (McCann and Mudambi, 2005).  The O (Ownership) and I (Internalization) dimensions of Dunning’s eclectic paradigm are relatively well understood compared to the L (Location) dimension.

Because of the historical role of national borders, location in IB is often conceptualized and operationalized as a country-specific characteristic. Spatial heterogeneity exists in IB to the extent that countries differ in terms of their cultural and institutional framework, level of economic development and availability of natural resources. The IB literature tends to view space in terms of distance between countries, relying on measures such as cultural distance, institutional distance, psychic distance, distance between country centers, and so on. Whereas for some of these types of distance, the country is appropriate unit of analysis, this is not necessarily true for all. For example, the international cultural distance between two Scandinavian countries like Denmark and Sweden may well be smaller than that between two Indians, one from the Hindi-speaking North and the other from the Tamil-speaking South. Alternatively, to understand the role of geographic distance in the Canadian automotive supply chain by measuring the distance to the traditional industry cluster in Detroit would miss the emerging new automotive clusters in the American South where most non-US MNEs like Nissan, Toyota and BMW have located their assembly plants.

To improve our understanding of the spatial dimension of IB activity and the interaction of location with governance and organization aspects of MNE activity, we need to build on insights from economic and human geography and regional science. By integrating IB more closely with literatures that explicitly recognize the subtleties of geographic space, we push the frontiers of the field.  In the process, we make connections with the emerging literature in international strategy that emphasizes the importance of firm-level decision-making on geographical outcomes, insights that can advance the research frontiers of economic geography (Nachum and Zaheer, 2005; Shaver and Flyer, 2000; Alcacer and Chung, 2002). At the most fundamental level, this involves incorporating the impact of sub-national locations on decision-making and performance of multinational enterprises (MNEs). We contend that uniting the IB literature’s rich insights on the organization and governance of the MNE with the nuanced analysis of space in the economic geography literature offers great opportunities for advancing our understanding of both internationalizing firms and locations.

Topics for the Special Issue

We welcome both theoretical and empirical contributions, and papers adopting either a single or multi level analysis. Illustrative topics are mentioned below:

  • The 'death of distance' and ‘spiky’ global innovation; some scholars have declared the globalized world to be flat, but at the same time the strategic and economic importance of geographically concentrated networks of firms has increased (e.g. Lahiri, 2010). Global connectedness is increasingly recognized as crucial determining the position of individual clusters in the global hierarchy (Cantwell and Janne, 1999; Meyer et al., 2011) and the success of firms within them. For MNEs, managing a portfolio of locations and serving as a key part of the “connective tissue” amongst clusters puts them in a powerful position. Equally, MNEs that fail to leverage their unique position may find themselves weaker in consequence. How does the increased importance of connectedness affect the traditional view in IB linking control to ownership given that connectedness does not necessarily coincide with ownership?
  • While there is a rich literature in IB on the MNE’s local embeddedness (e.g., Andersson et al., 2002), its spatial aspects are often simply assumed; they have rarely been distinguished or explored in an explicit manner.  Influential IB scholars have recently highlighted this lacuna (Dunning, 2009).  How is IB theory and practice affected when geographical co-location and embeddedness are disentangled?
  • From Ownership, Location and Internalization to Place, Space and Organization (PSO); within the OLI framework the role of transaction costs is crucial. In the core-periphery model the role of space, dominates. How does an interpretation of transaction costs along spatial dimensions (PSO) affect the predictions of the OLI framework?
  • Distance and the liability of foreignness; distance is conceptualized as a multidimensional construct mostly relating to inter-country characteristics. Is it meaningful to conceptualize distance as a multidimensional construct? Can we do a better job of disentangling these dimensions, in order to distinguish more clearly what is attributable to geographic distance, and what is attributable to cultural distance? E.g. the institutions of a place may depend partly on cultural characteristics, and partly on geographic issues such as resource availability, climate, proximity and relationship to other places etc. So papers that better compared and related the dimensions of distance in an IB setting might well prove foundational for other work to be done in this domain.
  • Economic geographers are concerned with firm location in general: why they start in certain places, why they tend to stick to those locations, why they sometimes move, why they expand by making investments in other locations and how they organize and co-ordinate their multi-locational activities.  Is the multinational firm simply a special case of a multi-locational firm?  How do the notions of place, space and organization bear on this question?
  • The role of the MNE in cluster formation; clusters are known to have life cycles. Whereas MNEs can play a catalyzing role in the start of a cluster and its further development, it is not clear how clusters and the (subsidiaries of) MNEs belonging to these clusters are affected when clusters are imploding or dissolving. Economic geography provides insights on cluster life cycles, and the questions arise relating to MNEs’ roles in these life cycles.  More specifically, MNEs improve the external connectivity of a cluster and we need to know more the implications of this connectivity for the development of the cluster.
  • Entry mode theory and spatial heterogeneity; entry mode theory is dominated by the role of transaction costs in determining the optimal governance structure. This theory and the associated empirical studies are in general space neutral. Economic geography has shown that transaction costs are not space neutral. How are the predictions made by entry mode theory affected when we incorporate the notion of spatial transaction costs?  Whereas country level institutional characteristics have been incorporated in entry mode studies, sub-national level spatial heterogeneity has so far been absent.
  • Spatial antecedents and consequences of geographical value chain disaggregation; as value chains are increasingly disaggregated into activities, projects and tasks, the internal networks of MNEs are becoming more open and increasingly decentralized. What does this likely imply for the international locational dispersion of activity across the full networks orchestrated by MNEs (which may include both 'internal' and 'external' elements if we define these purely in traditional ownership terms)? Conversely, what are the implications for locations of being relatively more (or less) conducive to more open kinds of firm networks locally, e.g. with respect to their IP regimes or other local institutional conditions?

In addition, we provide illustrative examples of some more general topic areas:

  • Local partners and geographic space; spatially proximate vs. spatially distant local partners;
  • The disaggregation of the value chain and the location of value creation;
  • Extra-organizational knowledge spillovers in industrial districts/clusters.

Submission process

All manuscripts will be reviewed as a cohort for this special issue. Manuscripts must be submitted in the window between November 1, 2011, and November 18, 2011, at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jibs. All submissions will go through the JIBS regular double-blind review process and follow the standard norms and processes.

For more information about this Call for Papers, please contact the Special Issue Editors or the JIBS Managing Editor (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).

Note: Please see full version at www.jibs.net for list of references cited in this call.

2011 International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG)

Earth on the Edge: Science for a Sustainable Planet
28 June - 7 July 2011
Melbourne Convention & Exhibition Centre
Melbourne, Australia

IUGG 2011 will be held from 28 June – 7 July 2011 at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre.  The General Assembly will be marked by a scientific program of outstanding plenary speakers, a comprehensive program of state of the art symposia organised by each IUGG association, a compelling keynote speakers program, and the highlight of IUGG conferences, an inter-disciplinary, inter-association program of symposia addressing major scientific issues of global and regional significance and concern.

The tragedy of the recent earthquakes Haiti and Chilean anomalous weather patterns world-wide, the on-going catastrophe of cyclones, the enormous loss of life after the Indian Ocean and Samoan tsunamis, and the heartbreak of the 2009 bush fires and 2010/11 floods in Australia – serve as a timely reminder of how much we still need to learn about our changing planet. IUGG 2011 will address some of these issues, and it is arguably the most important international multi-disciplinary conference to be able to do so because of the breadth and depth of the expertise of its eight participating scientific associations.

Form more information: http://www.iugg2011.com/

The 2011 2nd International Congress on Computer Applications and Computational Science
(CACS 2011)
15-17 November 2011, Bali, Indonesia

CACS 2010 aims to bring together researchers and scientists from academia, industry, and government laboratories to present new results and identify future research directions in computer applications and computational science.

All papers published in the CACS 2011 proceedings will be included in the IEEE Xplore and indexed in both Ei Compendex and ISTP. CACS 2011 has appeared in the IEEE Conferences (Conference Record # 18959, IEEE Catalog Number: CFP1175N-CDR, ISBN: 978-1-61284-995-9).

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

· Computer Architecture and VLSI
· Computer Control and Robotics
· Computers in Education and Learning Technologies
· Computer Networks and Data Communications
· Data Mining and Data Engineering
· Energy and Power Systems
· Intelligent Systems and Autonomous Agents
· Internet and Web Systems
· Scientific Computing and Modeling
· Signal, Image and Multimedia Processing
· Software Engineering

Bali is a favorite vacation destination for many nationalities. Bali's natural attractions include miles of sandy beaches, picturesque rice terraces, towering active volcanoes over 3,000 meters high, fast flowing rivers, deep ravines, pristine crater lakes, sacred caves, and lush tropical forests full of exotic wildlife. The island's rich cultural heritage is visible everywhere - in over 20,000 temples and palaces, in many colorful festivals and ceremonies, in drama, music, and dance. Bali is also well-known for its night life. Come to Bali enjoying the beautiful environment and fun here!

Paper Submission Deadline: 15 May 2011

Review Decision Notifications: 15 August 2011

Final Papers and Author Registration Deadline: 9 September 2011

ERSA 2011 - Nominations for EIB-ERSA prize is OPEN

The committee for the EIB-ERSA prize is asking for nominations of candidates for the EIB-ERSA prize for the ERSA 2011 Congress.

Persons eligible for this prize are those "living European regional scientists, who have made an outstanding contribution to the advancement of regional science".
Nominations can be made by every individual.

They should be made in an email to the president of the prize committee, Gunther Maier (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.), and should include a link to the C.V. of the nominated person.


The deadline for nominations is March 31st, 2011.

EIB - ERSA PRIZE RULES in http://www.ersa.org/home/eib-ersa-prize/article/eib-ersa-prize-rules


 

Call for Papers XXIV ESRS Congress -  Working Group on connections between tourism activities, socioeconomic fabrics and local development in European rural areas

We are very pleased to invite you to submit an abstract for the Working Group 21 - «Fertile Links?  Understanding the connections between tourism activities, socioeconomic fabrics and local development in European rural areas» (http://esrs2011.maich.gr/abstracts/wp21.pdf).

This Working Group is organized within the XXIV Congress of the ESRS – European Society for Rural Sociology, which will take place in Chania, Greece, between 22 – 25 August 2011 with the general theme «Inequality and Diversity in European Rural Areas» (http://esrs2011.maich.gr).

If you are interested in presenting a paper in our Working Group, please see the details for submission and key dates on the file attached or follow the link: http://esrs2011.maich.gr/papers.html.

Abstracts should be submitted till April, 30th both to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Authors will be notified on the acceptance of their abstracts by 20th May. Full papers must be then submitted until 30th June (please check the attached file for further details).

 

51st European Congress of the Regional Science Association International

37th Spanish Regional Science Association Conference

30th August - 3rd September 2011
Barcelona, Spain

CALL FOR PAPERS: ONLY ONE WEEK REMAINING

ERSA 2011 Congress in Barcelona, Spain

"New Challenges for European Regions and Urban Areas in a Globalised World"

An outstanding 2011 edition in Barcelona, with a unique platform of keynote speakers and high-level roundtable participants including:

 

Johannes Hahn

Policy Plenary Lecture of the Conference Commissioner of Regional Policy of the European Union

 

David Audretsch ; Maryanne Feldman; Richard Florida and Diego Puga

 

Special RoundTable participants
Antoine Bailly, Roberta Capello, Graham Clarke, Phil McCann, Rosina Moreno, Peter Nijkamp, Henry Overman, Raffaele Paci, Mark Partridge, Dan Rickman, Andrés Rodríguez-Pose, André Torré, and more to come



Your contribution is also essential to meet the new challenges set by the Congress theme.

Don't miss the chance to share and enrich your knowledge with colleagues from across the world.

Submit your abstract/paper by the 4th of March 2011

BE PART OF IT!

 

New submission process:

The abstracts and papers to be reviewed (for R-sessions, Young Scientist Sessions and Special Sessions) must be submitted all together before the deadline of the 4th of March 2011.

The Scientific Committee will review the abstracts and the papers all together.

The 22nd Pacific Conference of RSAI

The 22nd PRSCO conference will be held in Seoul Korea, 3-6 July, 2011, with hosting Korea session of Regional Science and Regional Science Association International at KOEX. The overall theme of conference is:

New trend and challenges - Green Growth of Regional Economy and High Tech Development and Job Creation.

More info: http://www.prsco2011.com

Deadline – abstracts must be submitted this week.

Regional Science Association Tripartite Workshop

British and Irish – Israeli – Netherlands Sections

May 2-4th 2011 London

Call for Papers

Smart Growth; Sustainable Growth; Inclusive Growth

Over the last two years Europe has faced the worst economic crisis since the 1930s while longer-term challenges - globalisation, pressure on resources, climate change, ageing – have intensified. Achieving sustainable and inclusive growth in the future will require new thinking and new policy approaches. The Europe 2020 strategy put forward by the EU Commission makes some suggestions. (see http://ec.europa.eu/eu2020/index_en.htm).

In this workshop we aim to focus on the three key themes of the Europe 2020 strategy – Growth, Environment and Inequality – and invite papers in any of these areas. Theoretical, empirical and policy focused contributions are welcome. Abstracts should be sent to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. before 28th February 2011. Acceptance will be confirmed by 11th March 2011. Full papers can be presented or distributed at the workshop.

The workshop will be held at The Resource Centre, 356 Holloway Road, London
N7 6PA (www.theresourcecentre.org.uk). The programme will commence at 6 pm on Monday May 2nd with a drinks reception. Parallel sessions will run through Tuesday 3rd and Wednesday 4th until 5.00pm. The workshop dinner will be held on the evening of Tuesday May 3rd.

We have confirmed a technical excursion to the London Olympics 2012 site as part of the workshop.

There is no charge for attending the workshop. Coffee, lunches, the welcome reception and the conference dinner are free to registered delegates. Dutch delegates will be responsible for their own travel and accommodation costs. For Israeli delegates presenting a paper at the workshop we are able to offer two nights bed and breakfast accommodation at the Bloomsbury Park Hotel.

 

Dr Declan Jordan
Secretary
Regional Science Association International - British and Irish Section
Department of Economics
University College Cork
Western Road
Cork
Ireland
 
+353 21 4902097
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

this is to remind you that that the call for abstracts for talks and posters for the ECCS'11 Vienna (Sep 12-16, 2011) is open, until April 1st, 2011. Early registration (reduced fees) is possible until April 30th, 2011. Please follow the instructions at http://www.eccs2011.eu

Further, we are happy to announce the list of satellite meetings, which will take place on Sep 14 and 15, 2011, see: http://www.eccs2011.eu/satellites/


All the best,
For the organizers
Stefan Thurner (Conference Chair)
Karl Sigmund (Program Chair)



CALL FOR PAPERS

European Conference on Complex Systems (ECCS'11), Vienna, September 12-16, 2011

Satellite meeting "Urban social dynamics: segregation and criminality"

This one-day workshop aims at bringing together researchers from different disciplines and backgrounds on topics of major interest for the analysis and understanding of urban economics and social dynamics. The focus will be mainly on social segregation and on criminality. Both topics have some aspects touching upon the issue of the emergence of social norms. Empirical as well as theoretical approaches (mathematical models and agent-based approaches) will be presented. Methodological aspects will also be discussed. Social scientists will present open issues in their field for which a complex system approach might be relevant.
This workshop is one of the events of ECCS'11 to be held in Vienna between the 12 and the 16 of September, 2011, and is open to any registered participant of the main conference,ECCS'11.

For this satellite meeting, there will be invited talks and contributed talks, the later being selected by an interdisciplinary scientific committee (see the home page of the satellite meeting, http://www.lps.ens.fr/~risc/eccs2011/). Researchers interested in contributing to the workshop should submit by mail an abstract of one page, including: name, first name, affiliation, homepage, email address; names and affiliations of co-authors; title of the talk; abstract; references with links to relevant papers of the authors on the web, whenever available.

Some specific topics of interest (non-exclusive list):
- Spatial segregation: income, ethnic, religious segregations; the interplay between spatial, economic and social factors; Schelling type models and other agent-based approaches;
- Criminality: Social capital and crime or other civic problems like riots; Explaining the international crime drop (since mid 1990's) and Why it did not happen in some countries; Policy making: reducing crime making use of mathematical modeling and agent-based approaches.
- Both domains: Collective dynamics, Emergence of social norms. Interplay between criminal behavior and socio-economic factors.

Methods of interest: any method or approach, e. g.: empirical approaches, collecting and analyzing data; modeling with partial differential equations (PDE), epidemic models, statistical physics models, agent-based models, game theoretic approaches...

Submissions should be sent to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. with the subject: « Segregation and crime at ECCS11 » before noon, Friday April 1st, 2011.

Remind that all the participants including speakers have to be registered to the main conference, for which the deadline for early registration is April 30 (see the website of the main conference, http://eccs2011.eu/). We will give the list of accepted papers (together with a waiting list) no later than the last week of April. Selected authors will have to confirm their participation before June 1st.

Authors of accepted contributions will be offered the possibility to send a full paper for publication after the conference. Original contributions will be encouraged but reviews of published works will also be allowed. In all cases the papers will be peer reviewed. Practical modalities will be detailed later on the workshop web page.

The organizers,
Mirta B. Gordon, LIG, CNRS, Grenoble
Jean-Pierre Nadal, LPS, Ecole Normale Supérieure, and CAMS, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris
Andromachi Tseloni, School of Social Sciences, Nottingham Trent  University, Nottingham
Annick Vignes, ERMES, Univ. Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas, Paris

ECCS’11 satellite meeting “Urban social dynamics: segregation and criminality”
Web page: http://www.lps.ens.fr/~risc/eccs2011/

Contact and submissions: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. with the subject: « Segregation and crime at ECCS11 »


Support: This event is part of the project “Urban Collective Dynamics: Individual and Spatial Heterogeneities” (DyXi) supported by the Program SYSCOMM of the French National Research Agency, the ANR (grant ANR-08-SYSC-008).Logistic: CAMS (Centre d'Analyse et de Mathématique Sociales, associated with the EHESS and the CNRS, Paris).Webpage hosted by the LPS (Laboratoire de Physique Statistique, ENS, Paris). Both the CAMS
and the LPS are members of the DyXi project.


35X8BVMKB

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The Regional Science Association International (RSAI), founded in 1954, is an international community of scholars interested in the regional impacts of national or global processes of economic and social change.

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