Awards

Elisabete Martins

A special issue on Local Informal Institutions and Inequality is scheduled for publication in November 2022.

The global economy, despite experiencing various crises, has been consistently growing. It can be argued that human well-being, on average, has steadily been improving. This can be observed from the increasing average income per capita and life expectancy globally. Severe inequality in human development, however, persists in many parts of the world. Research to understand the underlying causes of this inequality continues. Several determinants have been confirmed, such as lack of access to quality education, social safety nets and health facilities.

One factor that is less discussed is the role of local informal institutions in creating or reducing the human development gap among people where these institutions exist. Local informal institutions refer to norms or beliefs adopted by a society which can strictly divide the society into several social classes, castes, or groups. Examples of these institutions would be feudalism, conservative religiosity, and racism. These norms have been adopted for a long time and in many cases have been integrated with local culture. In many parts of the world, both in developed and developing countries and in different forms, these local informal institutions are still intact. Despite the existence of modern/government institutions, societies are still practicing them. They sometimes are also called local cultural, traditional or social institutions.

Some sources have argued that these kinds of institutions, such as caste and racism systems, create human development gaps. Others could not confirm this conclusion. This special issue wishes to discuss deeper elements of local informal institutions that explain the increase or decrease in human development inequality, and collect empirical evidence showing the role of local informal institutions in inducing or reducing human capital gaps among members of the society adopting the institution. We are calling for all empirical analyses, independent of place or time, which can help the understanding of the complex issues of informal institutions and human development inequality. Spatial works on these issues are particularly welcome.

Authors are kindly invited to submit their papers no later than 31st January, 2022, to the Editor of the Asia-Pacific Journal of Regional Science (APJRS). The submission website is: https://www.editorialmanager.com/ajrs/default.aspx.

All manuscripts will be refereed under the usual standard of APJRS. Once a manuscript has been accepted after review, it will be quickly released online with a DOI, which means that earlier submissions might be published online earlier, even if the publication schedule of the printed version is set. 

Please follow the Instructions for Authors of the APJRS in preparing your manuscript. For the tracking of submissions, please select the special feature titled Local Informal Institutions and Inequality at the “Select Article Type” stage.

Special Issue Editors:

Budy P. Resosudarmo, Professor at the Australian National University

Arief A. Yusuf , Professor at the Universitas Padjadjaran

https://www.springer.com/journal/41685/updates/19250906

 
Tuesday, 15 June 2021 05:38

Sven Erlander in memoriam

Professor Sven Erlander died on June 13 2021 at the age of 87.

He was a leading scholar in regional and transportation science.

His academic field was optimization with contributions of lasting value in transportation modelling.

Sven Erlander was for twelve years President of Linköping University.

Reported by Björn Hårsman, Lars-Göran Mattsson and Folke Snickars

We have decided to extend the Special Sessions Proposals submissions deadline for the 2021 APDR Congress until June 30, 2021.

We take this opportunity to remind you that the congress it will be held in Vila Real from September 16 to 17, 2021 and that the theme of this edition is “Green and inclusive transitions in Southern European regions: What can we do better?”.

All the necessary information so that you can send your work and register can be found on the website of the 2021 APDR Congress.

Deadline for Special Session proposals: June 30, 2021 (new date). Proposals should be sent by email to the secretariat of the Congress (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).

Deadline for Abstracts submissions: July 5, 2021. Authors should submit their abstracts through online submission system by following the link https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/APDR2021.

We look forward to your participation and see you soon in Vila Real.

Regards,

The Organizing Committee and the Board of APDR

Monday, 14 June 2021 10:02

2021 RSAI Fellows

The RSAI Fellows Committee, made up of Prof. Roberto Camagni (Chair), Prof. Kiyoshi Kobayashi, and Prof. Janice Madden, received and evaluated five excellent candidatures for this year's RSAI Fellows election. Thanks to the Committee for carefully reviewing them, and concluding that all were suitable for being voted by the RSAI Fellows, as the rules of this award dictate.

RSAI Fellows then voted, and the following four new Fellows have been elected this year:

  1. Prof. Amit Batabyal (RIT, USA) 
  2. Prof. Alessandra Faggian (GSSI, Italy)
  3. Prof. Randall Jackson (West Virginia University, USA)
  4. Prof. Kara Kockelmann (University of Texas at Austin, USA)

Congratulations to the new Fellows on the outstanding achievement!

Thank you in advance for your attention,

Kind regards,

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

unnamed

The RSAI joins the global regional science community in congratulating Prof. Juan Cuadrado-Roura, University of Alcalá, on winning the 2021 ERSA prize.

Congratulations Juan!

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

Cover Image

Papers in Regional Science
Volume 100, Issue 3

Pages: 603-844

June 2021

ISSUE INFORMATION

Free Access

Issue Information

Pages: 603-604 | First Published: 10 June 2021

FULL ARTICLES

Open Access

The persistent pay gap between Easterners and Westerners in Germany: A quarter‐century after reunification

Heather Dickey, Alessa M. Widmaier

Pages: 605-631 | First Published: 14 January 2021

Spatial impact of factors influencing the achievement of the Europa2020 employment targets

Jorge Chica-Olmo, Marina Checa-Olivas

Pages: 633-649 | First Published: 11 January 2021

Does social capital reduce entrepreneurs' petty corruption? Evidence across Indonesian regions

Julien Hanoteau, Gandhi Pawitan, Virginie Vial

Pages: 651-670 | First Published: 03 December 2020

Cultural and creative industries and regional diversification: Does size matter?

Gloria Cicerone, Alessandro Crociata, Daniele Mantegazzi

Pages: 671-687 | First Published: 11 November 2020

Open Access

Proximity across the distant worlds of university–industry collaborations

Utku Ali Rıza Alpaydın, Rune Dahl Fitjar

Pages: 689-711 | First Published: 24 November 2020

The internal geography of services value‐added in exports: A Latin American perspective

Eduardo A. Haddad, Inácio F. Araújo

Pages: 713-744 | First Published: 18 December 2020

Local demand shocks and firms' survival: An application to the Italian economy during the Great Recession

Giovanni Marin, Marco Modica

Pages: 745-775 | First Published: 28 November 2020

Market concentration in the Spanish turbot aquaculture sector: A regional analysis

Raquel Fernández-González, Marcos I. Pérez-Pérez, María Dolores Garza Gil

Pages: 777-794 | First Published: 03 December 2020

Mosquitoes, birth rates and regional spillovers: Evidence from the Zika epidemic in Brazil

Lívia Madeira Triaca, Felipe Garcia Ribeiro, César Augusto Oviedo Tejada

Pages: 795-813 | First Published: 18 December 2020

Proposing new measures of employment deconcentration and spatial dispersion across metropolitan areas in the US

John R. Hipp, Jae Hong Kim, Benjamin Forthun

Pages: 815-841 | First Published: 12 January 2021

BOOK REVIEW

Invisible China: How the urban–rural divide threatens China's rise Edited by Scott Rozelle Natalie Hell, Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 2020. US$27.50, Hb, 231pp. ISBN 978‐0‐226‐73952‐6

Amitrajeet A. Batabyal

Pages: 843-844 | First Published: 23 March 2021

 

Dear colleagues,

We are pleased to announce the edition of a special issue of Regional Science Policy & Practice, linked to the International Regional Science Association (RSAI), with the theme of the special session S04 - Territorial inequalities and spatial (in) justice in Europe whose Coordinator is Ana Viñuela.

We also announce a special issue of Investigaciones Regionales-Journal of Regional Research linked to special session 07 - Industry 4.0 and sustainability in regions, clusters & industrial districts whose coordinator is José Hervas-Oliver.

We remind you that the abstract submission deadline for the XLVI Regional Studies Meeting is until Thursday, June 10, 2021 (this deadline cannot be extended so as not to affect the rest of the program dates).

The templates of all the formats of the summary can be downloaded from the website here.

We look forward to your participation and see you soon in Madrid.

Regards,

The Organizing Committee

Dear colleagues,

Due to the high number of petitions received, we have decided to extend the abstract submission deadline for the XLVI Regional Studies Meeting  until Thursday, June 10, 2021 (this deadline cannot be extended so as not to affect the rest of the program dates).

We take this opportunity to remind you that it will be held in Madrid from November 24 to 26, 2021 and that the motto of this edition is “Full cities, empty territories”.

We ask you to disseminate this information to all the people you may consider interested in participating. We remind you that the maximum length is 300 words and will be uploaded through the management area. The presentation of results of research works in progress for which there is not yet a complete article will be accepted. In order for the Scientific Committee to consider the acceptance of said works, an expanded abstract will be required, with a minimum length of 1,500 words. The templates of all the formats of the summary can be downloaded from the website here.

All the necessary information so that you can send your work and register can be found on the website of the XLVI Regional Studies Meeting.

We look forward to your participation and see you soon in Madrid.

Regards,

The Organizing Committee

Friday, 04 June 2021 13:54

ERSA Congress registration is OPEN!

Keynotes Speakers

Special Sessions

Registration info

The 60th ERSA Congress will be online

from 24 > 27 August 2021!

Keynote Speakers' Highlight

We are delighted to present our keynote speakers:

Cesar A. Hidalgo, Daniela Jacobs, Andrés Rogríguez-Pose, Tom Brökel, Rosella Nicolini, Laura Resmini

Click here to find out more about our amazing speakers' line-up.

ERSA2021 benefits include:

> 6 prestigious Keynote lectures

> 2 outstanding round tables (lead by the EU and OECD)

> + 800 accepted authors from over 50 countries provide an overview of the main developments on the domains of Regional Science

> Dedicated and branded recording of your own presentation(s)

> Access to recording of all sessions

> Meeting with Journal editors

> and more

Draft programme is foreseen by mid-July.

Stay tuned to the Congress website for further updates.

Registration is open!

·     ERSA Annual congress is the largest event of regional scientists and practitioners from across the globe!

·     ERSA Congress is a unique platform to share, network and learn

·     ERSA Congress is open to anyone interested in attending. See attendee fee on the registration page.

·     RSAI Membership is valuable. Join RSAI Community and take advantage of the Member registration rate.

Register now


Start networking with fellow participants from around the world on twitter #ersa2021

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.

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