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Elisabete Martins

RSPP Workshop

Enlargement of the Western Balkan region in the European Union

29 September 2023, Pristina, Kosovo

The scientific journal Regional Science Policy and Practice belongs to Regional Science Association International and it is committed to promote the development of Regional Science across the globe specifically through the promotion of special issues on nurtured by workshops.
The main purpose of this workshop is to mobilize and nurture talents across the Western Balkans, publish a special issue of the journal on European Integration in Western Balkans and support RSAI in the creation of regional science sections in Western Balkans.

The workshop seeks to enhance participants understanding of recent developments and methodologies that could be useful for spatial and regional analysis facilitating the European integration and implementation of sustainable development goals in the Western Balkan region. Spatial assessment is more important to our understanding of economic and geographical problems, the workshop will develop the skillsets and knowledge of regional scientist to be able to analyse and understand complex spatial problems and to apply these tools in developing innovative research, in policy making and further expanding research capacities in the Western Balkan region.

Through this workshop, participants will be able to learn and apply spatial econometric models, geographic data, agglomeration and movement of labour and capital to make informed policy decisions that can facilitate the European integration process. Participants will have the opportunity to present their research and receive constructive feedback from peers and senior scholars.

Submission of abstracts: before 10 Sept. 2023

https://wbalkansworkshoppr.wixsite.com/my-site-1/submissions

Thursday, 07 September 2023 08:24

ERSA Monthly E-news - August 2023

6 September 2023 - Nr 7/23

The issue includes:

·     Internal communication

·     ERSA Congress

·     Ongoing Calls on ERSA Sections' Agendas

·     Journal news

·     Publications

·     Vacancies

Dear Members of ERSA, dear Colleagues,

Back from Alicante where our 62nd ERSA Congress concluded last friday. The Congress Review Enews will be sent out next week, but we can already report on the great success of this year's edition.

This Congress was also the time of the election of the future ERSA President and Vice-President.

Two friends, colleagues and outstanding researchers were elected. My warmest congratulations to Roberta Capello (Politecnico di Milano): ERSA President-elect, and Yannis Psycharis (Panteion University, Athens): ERSA Vice-President-elect. All my best wishes to both of them for their terms starting next January. ERSA will be in good hands in the future.

With best wishes,

André Torre, ERSA President

A BIG THANK YOU TO ALL PARTICIPANTS!

This success is above all yours!

More info in the upcoming Congress Review Enews.

#ERSA2024

FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT - read more on Key dates

JOIN US IN BRUSSELS!

UNIVERSITY PROGRAMME

21st European Week of Regions and Cities

Thriving Regions, Stronger Europe

9-12 October 2023, Brussels (Belgium)

Included 6 outstanding University Sessions

Partners: ERSA, RSA and AESOP

Registration deadline: 30 September 2023

Read more

Internal Communication

Election of New ERSA President and Vice President

 

We are delighted to communicate that Roberta Capello (Politecnico di Milano, Italy - AISRe) has been elected as the new President of ERSA. Her 5-year term will start on 1 January 2024.

Yannis Psycharis (Panteion University, Greece - ERSA-RSAI Greek Section) was elected as the Vice-President of ERSA.

Both will start their five-year term on 1st January 2024. The election took place on 1st September 2023, during the 62nd ERSA Congress in Alicante.

Sections' Events

News, ongoing calls & deadlines

>>> September Agenda

AISRE XLIV Annual Scientific Conference

Europe and the Mediterranean between transitions and conflicts. Opportunities and risks for regions and territories

6-8 September 2023, Naples, Italy

About to to start!

more

VI Seminar for New Academic Researchers

14-15 September 2023, Barcelona, Spain

more

14th RRSA International Conference

Unlocking Regional Potentials Through Cohesion Policy – Opportunities and Challenges

23-24 November 2023, Bucharest, Romania

First announcement!

more

See all upcoming Events

Journal News

New Event

RSPP Workshop

Enlargement of the Western Balkan region in the European Union

29 September 2023, Pristina, Kosovo

Submission of abstracts: before 10 Sept. 2023

+ Opportunity for Special issue in RSPP

read more

Recently published

in RSPP

RSPP

"Understanding peripherality in a multidimensional geographical, socioeconomic, and institutional context: Evidence from Greece"

By Dimitrios Tsiotas, Vassilis Tselios

read more

REGION 

Vol. 10 No. 3 (Aug. 2023) Issue!

more

Papers in Regional Science (PiRS)

Vol. 102, Issue 4 (Aug. 2023)

more

Regional Science Policy & Practice (RSPP) 

Call for papers

Call for Special Issue:  Special Issue on Geography of discontent and beyond: extreme voting, protestations, riots and violence, and their spatial content

Guest editors: André Torre, Sébastien Bourdin

Deadline: 31 January 2024

 

more

Ongoing Journals' calls more

ERSA-RSAI Members Publish

The Colombian Economy and Its Regional Structural Challenges

A Linkages Approach

Editors:

Eduardo A. Haddad, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil

Jaime Bonnet, Banco de la República, Colombia

Geoffrey J. D. Hewing , University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, USA

About the book

·     This book examines regional structural challenges on Colombia’s path to sustainable social cohesion and regionally inclusive growth.

·     These challenges can be divided into three main groups: (i) those that focus on competitiveness and the supply side, (ii) those that arise from critical business cycle issues on the demand side, and (iii) those concerning environmental sustainability, employment and social inclusion

Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023

read more

New publications to share?

Your are member of the ERSA Community and you have recently published a book, grasp this opportunity to inform us about it. We are looking for

· Books published in 2023

· Preferably written in English 

Send an email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Vacancies

·     Post-doctoral fellow in the areas of Circular Value & Supply Chains, Regional Development, and Multi-Level Policy Dynamics at Lund University, Faculty of Engineering, Department of Design Sciences, Lund, Sweden Application deadline: 30 September 2023

read more

If you want to share an announcementinteresting for our community,

Send us an email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and we will promote it via our channels

Tuesday, 05 September 2023 10:07

Nominations for RSAI Councilors-at-large

Dear RSAI members,

By RSAI Constitution, nominations for Councilors-at-large “shall be made by the Council after solicitation of suggestions from the members of the Association”. At the end of 2023, the position on the RSAI Council held by Prof. Isabelle Thomas,(Université Catholique de Louvain), Prof. Jouke Van Dijk (Rijksuniversiteit Groningen) and Prof. Rosella Nicolini (Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona) will expire; we therefore inform that the proposals for a councilor-at-large can be sent to the address This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. (cc-ing RSAI's ED at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.) within September 30, 2023. Candidatures will have to include a professional CV and a photo.

The election of a councilor-at-large for the period 2024-2026 will take place electronically by RSAI members during the month of October 2023.

Thank you in advance,

Kind regards,

Andrea Caragliu
Associate Professor of Regional and Urban Economics
Politecnico di Milano, ABC Department
RSAI Executive Director

THE NEW ISSUE OF REGIONAL STATISTICS IS ALREADY AVAILABLE!

We are pleased to inform you that a new issue of the Regional Statistics has been released and now it’s available online.

https://www.ksh.hu/terstat_eng_current_issue

REGIONAL STATISTICS, 2023, VOL 13, No 4.

STUDIES

Balázs Tóth – Gyula Nagy: Digital skill-based centre-periphery differences in Europe, 2019

http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2023/2023_04/rs130401.pdf

Kostas Rontos – Maria-Eleni Syrmali – Luca Salvati – Ioannis Vavouras : Socioeconomic development and corruption: A global panel regression analysis, 2005–2019

http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2023/2023_04/rs130402.pdf

Fernando Delbianco – Andrés Fioriti – Fernando Tohmé: Designing a contemporaneity index: Detecting regional similarities in South America, 1961–2018

http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2023/2023_04/rs130403.pdf

Isaiah Maket – Izabella Szakálné Kanó – Zsófia Vas: Estimations of pooled dynamic panel data model with time-space dependence of selected Sub-Saharan African urban agglomerations, 2000–2020

http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2023/2023_04/rs130404.pdf

Vahid Kafili – Mohammadsaeed Zabihidan – Mir Hadi Hosseini Kondelaji: Income distribution and environmental pollution: A panel data analysis for the provinces of Iran, 2005–2016

http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2023/2023_04/rs130405.pdf

Han-Sol Lee – Alexander M. Zobov – Sergey U. Chernikov – Yury N. Moseykin: The impact of the services trade partnership with Asian countries of APEC on the economic growth in Russia, 2002–2021

http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2023/2023_04/rs130406.pdf

Zoltán Egri – Tamás Tánczos: Global embeddedness and local responses: Trends in income inequality in Hungary following the 2008 economic crisis

http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2023/2023_04/rs130407.pdf

Anna Csizovszky – Attila Buzási: Analysis of community resilience in Hungary – An adaptation of the basic resilience indicators for communities (BRIC), 2020

http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2023/2023_04/rs130408.pdf

Join us to our social networking sites:

https://www.facebook.com/RegionalStatistics

https://ksh.academia.edu/RegionalStatistics

Monday, 28 August 2023 09:52

14th edition of the RSAI World Congress

Dear RSAI members,

I hope this email finds you well.

We are very happy to deliver great news! The RSAI Council decided to organize the 14th edition of the World Congress of Regional Science at John Von Neumann University in Kecskemét, Hungary. The Congress, entitled "Sustainable regional economic growth: Global challenges and new regional development trajectories" and  co-organized by the Hungarian section of the RSAI and John Von Neumann University, will run from Apr. 8 through Apr. 11, 2024. It will represent a great opportunity for regional scientists from all over the world to get together and exchange ideas, criticism, and suggestions to advance our understanding of the discipline. Kecskemét is located just 40 minutes away from lovely Budapest, and offers great accessibility for people reaching the congress from different locations.

The congress already has two confirmed keynote speakers (Prof. Özge Öner, University of Cambridge, UK, and Prof. Eduardo Haddad, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil). The organizers guarantee the geographically, and discipline-wise, widest and most different crowd of regional scientists among all congresses. We will follow up with more details as soon as possible, but in the meantime, do set these dates in your agendas!

Kind regards,
Hans Westlund (RSAI President)
Balázs Forman (Local Organizing Committee)
József Kárpáti (Local Organizing Committee)
Andrea Caragliu (RSAI Executive Director)

PhotoDanielaConstantinDaniela Constantin awarded the Kohno prize!

The committee (made up of Hans Westlund, RSAI president; Yoshiro Higano and Eduardo Haddad, LRPC members; and Lily Kiminami, RSAI Council member) in charge of selecting the recipient of the 2023 Hirotada Kohno award recommended Prof. Daniela Constantin (RRSA) to be the recipient of the award. The motivation provided by the committee reads as follows :

Dr Daniela Constantin, Professor of Regional and Urban Economics and Policy at the Bucharest University of Economic

Studies, Romania, has served the Regional Science community since the early 1990s. She has been the main character behind the establishment and development of the Romanian Section of the RSAI, for which she has served as President for over twenty years. Also, she is the Scientific Director of the Romanian Journal of Regional Science (founded 2007).

Daniela Constantin has been a member of the ERSA Council for more than 20 years, and has over the years had an innumerable number of commissions for ERSA. Currently, she is one of the editors of the “Papers in Regional Science” under Rosella Nicolini’s leadership as well as a member of the editorial boards of “Regional Science Policy and Practice” and “Region”. When the RSAI World Congress was held in Timisoara 2012, Professor Constantin served as Co-President of the Organising Committee.  Thereafter, she has among other things been elected as Councilor-at-Large of the RSAI Council for two consecutive terms (2020-2022 and 2023-2025).

Dr Daniela Constantin’s long-term, selfless involvement at different levels in the Regional Science community makes her a worthy recipient of the Kohno Award.

Andrea Caragliu

Associate Professor of Regional and Urban Economics

Politecnico di Milano, ABC Department

RSAI Executive Director

ANNOUNCEMENT

The Regional Science Academy (TRSA) events during the ERSA conference in August 2023

Dear TRSA members, dear RSAI friends and others:

We hope you have enjoyed a most satisfying holiday season. Next week the ERSA conference will be held in Alicante. We expect a great event. On the occasion of ERSA, The Regional Science Academy (TRSA) has organized various special events:

  1. ABC (Advanced Brainstorm Carrefour) on ‘New Spatial Coronametric Analyses in Regional Science,’ scheduled for Tuesday, August 29, 2023, from 09:30 to 17:30.

Final ABC programme: https://we.tl/t-NRLjPar5oY

  1. Memorial session on Roberto Camagni, followed by an informal get-together ​​​annex reception, to be held on Wednesday, August 30, 2023, from 18:00 to 19:15. 

          Join Zoom Meeting:         

          https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81713845081?pwd=K1VEUVM2aHhLSEJEWVhiOXRTZEN2QT09

          Meeting ID: 817 1384 5081

          Passcode: 418227

Final memorial session programme: TBA very soon!

  1. Special Academic Session (SAS) S78 on ‘The Geography of Happiness: The Urban Paradox in Well-being, Satisfaction, and Love,’ to be held on Thursday, August 31, 2023, starting at 09:00 and concluding at 18:00.

Final SAS -  S78  programmehttps://we.tl/t-GwXJ8Q5O6P

  1. Special Academic Session (SAS) S79 on ‘Is the New Economic Geography (NEG) still Alive and Well in 2023? Smart Algorithmic Places and Artificial Intelligent Systems,”’ taking place on Friday, September 1, 2023, from 09:00 to 16:15

​​​The latter session includes two great events:

  • · Great Minds in Regional Sciencesession on the legacy of Ake Andersson, by Bjorn Harsman and Folke Snickars, from 12:25 to 13:15.
  • · ​Keynote speakers & Roundtable Discussionon: 

Is the New Economic Geography (NEG) still Alive and Well in 2023?”, from 14:00 to 16:15, featuring esteemed speakers like Nobel laureate Professor Paul Krugman, Edward Glaeser, Carlos Moreno, and many other distinguished scholars!          

Final SAS -  S79 programme: https://we.tl/t-YlakspYzcd

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Please inform us if you would like to join us (online/onsite) via This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

We hope to welcome you all, either physically or online (see full programmes: https://we.tl/t-ss3cjkr0FB).

Cordially yours,

thsa

Asia-Pacific Journal of Regional Science

Special Issue: Assessment of small-town development for inclusive, higher, and sustainable economic growth

Urbanization is a necessary component of economic growth. However, to maximize its benefits, urban management is crucial. In industrialized nations, urban expansion is polycentric and less concentrated, which is helpful in this regard. According to data from the 2018 Revision of World Urbanization Prospects, of the 30 major urban agglomerations, India is home to four while Europe has one. Compared to 25% in India and 20% globally, just 9% of the European population reside in cities with a population of over 5 million. Indian urbanization is mainly concentrated in and around the large cities: 47 million-plus cities in India accommodated about 40% of the total urban population in 2011. Because of this, the dominance of large cities in developing nations has baselessly neglected a significant number of small towns, which are crucial for reducing poverty, promoting regional equality, fostering the growth of a town's surrounding rural areas, relieving pressure on large cities, and promoting non-farming activities for sustainable urbanization and achieving higher economic development. The emergence of small towns draws a sizable number of people from rural regions into the city, where they will be employed to the best ability to increase and sustain economic growth. Furthermore, the development of small towns needs to be given much more priority to accomplish Sustainable Development Goal 11 (United Nations Development Program, 2015). 

Cover Image

Papers in Regional Science
Volume 102, Issue 4

Pages: 675-900

August 2023

ISSUE INFORMATION

Free Access

Issue Information

Pages: 675-676 | First Published: 23 August 2023

FULL ARTICLES

Place‐based subsidies and employment growth in rural America: Evidence from the broadband initiatives programme

Anil Rupasingha, John Pender, Ryan Williams, Joshua Goldstein, Devika Nair

Pages: 677-708 | First Published: 01 June 2023

Open Access

The evolution of the Kuznets curve in Canada

Sébastien Breau, Annie Lee

Pages: 709-735 | First Published: 01 May 2023

Open Access

Analysing public debt in the Mexican states: Spatial convergence, regional drivers and policy recommendations

Mihaela Simionescu, Javier Cifuentes-Faura

Pages: 737-760 | First Published: 29 June 2023

Open Access

Mental health assimilation of rural–urban migrants in developing countries: Evidence from Indonesia's four cities

Rus'an Nasrudin, Budy P. Resosudarmo

Pages: 761-790 | First Published: 11 July 2023

Innovation dynamics and club convergence in innovation activity in China: A temporal perspective

Eduardo Jimenez-Moro, Panagiotis Piperopoulos, Mario Kafouros, Alan Au Kai Ming

Pages: 791-816 | First Published: 05 July 2023

Open Access

Regional development trap in Turkey: Can relatedness find a way out?

İbrahim Tuğrul Çınar

Pages: 817-850 | First Published: 30 May 2023

Open Access

Examination of related diversification in laggard regions

Kyriakos Drivas, Claire Economidou, Ioannis Kaplanis, Maria Theano Tagaraki

Pages: 851-869 | First Published: 17 July 2023

Open Access

Putting MARS into space. Non‐linearities and spatial effects in hedonic models

Fernando López, Konstatin Kholodilin

Pages: 871-896 | First Published: 25 May 2023

BOOK REVIEW

How the world really works: The science behind how we got here and where we are going. By Vaclav Smil, Penguin. 2022.

Yu (Marco) Nie

Pages: 897-900 | First Published: 30 June 2023

rspp

Regional Science Policy & Practice (RSPP)

Call for Papers Special Issue: Geography of discontent and beyond: extreme voting, protestations, riots and violence, and their spatial content

Guest editors

André Torre (University Paris-Saclay) and Sébastien Bourdin (EM Normandie Business School)

Research on the geography of discontent has become increasingly important in recent years, focusing on populations dissatisfied with their day-to-day life, who express their discontent through extreme or dissident votes (Rodríguez-Pose, 2018; McCann, 2018). However, voting is not the only expression of discontent, which can manifest in various ways and can often be more direct or even brutal, especially through street protests.

Protest movements, such as the Yellow Vests in France (Bourdin & Torre, 2023) or anti-austerity protests in Greece (Artelaris & Tsirbas, 2018), have taken a significant place in the contemporary global political landscape. These movements, which arise at the local, national and international levels, reflect deep political discontent, often rooted in economic, social and spatial disparities (Brenner et al., 2010; Eva et al., 2022). The recent riots in France may also be related to this family of movements of protestation.

Research in political geography has shown that these movements are often linked to the perception of socio-spatial injustice (Soja, 2009). With this in mind, economic and social disparities at the local and regional levels are becoming focal points of tension (Rodríguez-Pose, 2018). These movements can be understood as responses to socio-economic and political exclusion, alongside spatial marginalization (Marcuse, 2009).

In addition to economic and social disparities, other parameters may explain the genesis of discontent. Decentralization, for example, has often strengthened some regions at the expense of others. This trend has often resulted in increased metropolisation, characterized by disproportionate investment in large urban centres, abandoning many peripheral territories (Torre & Bourdin, 2023). This process can exacerbate regional inequalities and contribute to a sense of abandonment among people in deprived areas, fueling discontent and protest (Bourdin & Tai, 2022). In addition, the quality of institutions - at national, regional and local levels - is another major factor in dissatisfaction. Weak or ineffective institutions can create resentment among the population, generating political tensions that can manifest themselves in the street (Rodríguez-Pose, 2020). Studies have shown that when citizens perceive their institutions to be corrupt, ineffective or indifferent to their needs, they are more likely to participate in protest movements (Rothstein & Teorell, 2008).

Thus, protest movements often serve as revelators of regional inequalities, highlighting gaps in local and regional public policies (Pike et al., 2017). They challenge traditional territorial governance frameworks and highlight the need for more inclusive approaches to regional and territorial development, addressing issues of conflict and local opposition (Torre, 2023).

In this context, we are seeking researches that explore protest movements, going beyond the now well-documented analyses of protest by voting for extreme parties. Topics of interest for this special issue include, but are not limited to:

  • • The analysis of issues related to extreme voting behaviors, considering their socio-spatial aspects and an exploration of perceived or actual factors of exclusion. How can we go further than the major examples recently analysed?
  • • Geographic analysis of protest movements: How do spatial characteristics, regional socio-economic factors, urban planning, transport and mobility influence the birth, development and impact of these movements?
  • • Regional inequalities and their role in political disenchantment and discontent: How do regional economic, social and environmental inequalities fuel these protest movements?
  • • The role of regional and local policies in the emergence of protest movements: How much responsibility do regional public policies play in the emergence of these movements?
  • • Forms and methods of protest: How different forms of protest (street demonstrations, occupation of specific places, traditional media such as television, press or radio, mobilization on social networks) influence the dynamics and impact of protest movements? What role do these different forms play in the construction of a collective identity and in the elaboration of spatial protest strategies?
  • • Regional consequences of protest movements: How do these movements affect local economies, regional development, social structures, the environment and public policies?
  • • Policy strategies to mitigate disenchantment and political discontent: What policies and practices have been effective in addressing these issues at the local and regional level? What lessons can be learned for the future?

Deadline for submission of full papers: 31st January 2024

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.; This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

(Some waivers will be displayed for the best papers whose authors are not able to pay APCs)

REFERENCES:

Artelaris, P., & Tsirbas, Y. (2018). Anti-austerity voting in an era of economic crisis: Regional evidence from the 2015 referendum in Greece. Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space, 36(4), 589-608.

Bourdin, S., & Tai, J. (2022). Abstentionist voting–between disengagement and protestation in neglected areas: A spatial analysis of the Paris metropolis. International Regional Science Review, 45(3), 263-292.

Bourdin, S., & Torre, A. (2023). Geography of contestation: A study on the Yellow Vest movement and the rise of populism in France. Journal of Regional Science, 63(1), 214-235.

Brenner, N., Peck, J., & Theodore, N. (2010). Variegated neoliberalization: geographies, modalities, pathways. Global Networks, 10(2), 182-222.

Eva, M., Cehan, A., Corodescu-Roșca, E., & Bourdin, S. (2022). Spatial patterns of regional inequalities: Empirical evidence from a large panel of countries. Applied Geography, 140, 102638.

McCann, P. (2018). The trade, geography and regional implications of Brexit. Papers in Regional Science, 97, 3-8.

Pike, A., Rodríguez-Pose, A., & Tomaney, J. (2017). Local and regional development. Routledge.

Rodríguez-Pose, A. (2018). The revenge of the places that don’t matter (and what to do about it). Cambridge journal of regions, economy and society, 11(1), 189-209.

Rodríguez‐Pose, A. (2020). Institutions and the fortunes of territories. Regional Science Policy & Practice, 12(3), 371-386.

Soja, E. (2009). The city and spatial justice. Justice spatiale/Spatial justice, 1(1), 1-5.

Torre, A. (2023). Contribution to the theory of territorial development: a territorial innovations approach. Regional Studies, 1-16.

Torre, A., & Bourdin, S. (2023). The French territorial reform of the regions: Objectives, risks and challenges for some forgotten territories. International Journal of Public Administration, 46(11), 761-772.

About Us

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.

Get In Touch

Regional Science Association International
University of Azores, Oficce 155-156, Rua Capitão João D'Ávila, 9700-042 Angra do Heroísmo, Azores, Portugal

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