Editors: Poot, Jacques, Roskruge, Matthew (Eds.)
Provides an understanding of population change and dynamics across the Asia–Pacific region, with a specific focus on regional dynamicsOffers new insights into the demographic challenges facing the Asia-Pacific region in terms of migration, ageing and uneven population distribution and growth.
Innovations, Regional Growth and Migration
Editors: Jackson, Randall, Schaeffer, Peter (Eds.)
Identifies trends and future developments in the areas of innovation, regional growth and migration. Covers research areas such as mobility, regional forecasting, and regional policy, and includes expert contributions on disasters, resilience, and sustainability. Builds on recent methodological and modelling advances, as well as on extensive policy-analysis experience.
Methodological Advances, Regional Systems Modeling and Open Sciences
Editors: Jackson, Randall, Schaeffer, Peter (Eds.)
Identifies methodological advances as well as trends and future developments in regional systems modelling and open science. Covers research areas such as interindustry modelling, computable general equilibrium models, exploratory spatial data analysis, geographic information science, spatial econometrics. Builds on recent methodological and modelling advances, as well as on extensive policy-analysis experience.
Edited by Hans Westlund and Johan P. Larsson
The role of social capital in regional development is a multifaceted topic which is studied all over the world using various methods and across numerous disciplines. It has long been evident that social capital is important for regional development, however, it is less clear how this works in practice. Do all types of social capital have the same effects and are different kinds of regions impacted in the same way? This book is the first to offer an overview of this rapidly expanding field of research and to thoroughly analyse the complex issue of social capital and regional development.
An Emphasis on Marshallian and Monetary External Economies
Authors: Kohno, Hirotada
Argues for the importance of measuring incidence-basis indirect economic effects, showing that dynamic and spatial simulation models currently popular in regional science are useful. Clarifies intrinsic points of contradictory conclusions by H. Mohring and J. Tinbergen with the introduction of generation-basis and incidence-basis economic effects. Shows that the argument by J. Tinbergen is correct within a real setting in which the Marshallian type of external economies exists.
Presents a joint treatment of spatial econometrics and spatial interaction modelling. Evaluates the suitability of spatial econometrics for the use of areal data in flow-data modeling. Includes empirical applications from tourism, interregional trade and migration, as well as residential relocation.
Analytical Tools and Public Policies
Authors: Torre, André, Wallet, Frédéric
This book intends to provide analytical and policy tools for investigating the question of the development of rural and peri-urban areas. The aim is to shed some light on this topic and in particular to contribute to a better understanding of the link between issues of regional or territorial development and issues of rural development. The text addresses the question of the disputed notions and definitions of rural development in rural and regional studies, examines the literature of regional and territorial development and the policies of regional development and planning. It also presents scenarios for the future of rural areas, with a focus on European territories.
Editors: Matias, Álvaro, Nijkamp, Peter, Romão, João (Eds.)
This book presents a series of studies on the socio-economic impacts of tourism, with a special focus on the determinants of tourism competitiveness at the destination level. The authors offer a systematic overview of this important issue, presenting relevant empirical studies from different parts of the world, based on modern theoretical approaches and adequate analysis tools, in the context of their policy or managerial implications.
Cohesion, Results-Orientation and Smart Specialisation
By Philip McCann
The regional and urban development policy of the European Union, or more precisely, EU Cohesion Policy, is undergoing change. This development is driven by the enormous transformations in European regions and by shifts in thinking and analysis. The issues raised by the changes to regional and urban development policy in Europe span many academic disciplines and build on different research methodologies. A broad approach is required in order to address these issues and this book explicitly incorporates insights from a range of different disciplines. After examining the major regional and urban features of the European economy and discussing the analytical underpinnings of the current re-design to EU Cohesion Policy, the book also aims to provide a road map of the various EU regional and urban data-sources which are available to researchers and policy-makers. This book is aimed at all economists, geographers, regional scientists, spatial planners, transportation scientists, sociologists, urban studies researchers, environmental scholars, political scientists and policy-analysts who are interested in regional and urban issues.
Knowledge, Technology and Internationalization
Edited by Charlie Karlsson and Sofia Wixe
Innovation and entrepreneurship are the prime drivers in the global economy. This scholarly book identifies some of the key forces behind innovation and entrepreneurship at the same time as it closes the gap between science and technology R&D, innovation, entrepreneurship, productivity growth, and internationalization. The expert contributions explore the underlying forces and add substantial theoretical and empirical knowledge to the current state-of-the-art in several research fields including the economics of innovation and entrepreneurship, regional economics, economic geography and international economics.
Spatial Dynamics in the Urban Century
Edited by Karima Kourtit, Adam Mickiewicz, Peter Nijkamp and Roger R. Stough
This book examines urban growth and the dynamics that are transforming the city and city regions in the 21st century focusing specifically on the spatial aspects of this process in the “Urban Century”. Forces that are driving city growth include agglomeration spillovers, concentration of innovation and entrepreneurship, diversity of information and knowledge resources, and better amenities and higher wages. These benefits produce a positive reinforcing system that attracts more people with new ideas and information, fuelling innovation, new products and services and more high-wage jobs, thereby attracting more people. Such growth also produces undesirable effects such as air and water pollution, poverty, congestion and crowding. These combined factors both impact and change the geography and spatial dynamics of the city. These transformations and the public policies that may be critical to the quality of life, both today and in the future, are the substance of this book.
Studies Dedicated to Walter Isard
Editors: Nijkamp, Peter, Rose, Adam, Kourtit, Karima (Eds.)
This volume is a collection of fresh and novel contributions to regional science. They commemorate the scientific inheritance of the founding father of regional science, the late Walter Isard. All papers are written by well-known scholars in the field and serve to highlight the great importance of regional science theory and methodology for a better understanding of current spatial and environmental problems throughout our planet. The book showcases a multidisciplinary panorama of modern regional science research and presents new insights by applying regional science approaches.
Editors: Fischer, Manfred M., Nijkamp, Peter (Eds.)
The Handbook of Regional Science is a multi-volume reference work providing a state-of-the-art knowledge on regional science composed by renowned scientists in the field. The Handbook is intended to serve the academic needs of graduate students, and junior and senior scientists in regional science and related fields, with an interest in studying local and regional socio-economic issues. The multi-volume handbook seeks to cover the field of regional science comprehensively, including areas such as regional housing and labor markets, regional economic growth, innovation and regional economic development, new and evolutionary economic geography, location and interaction, the environment and natural resources, spatial analysis and geo-computation as well as spatial statistics and econometrics.
Edited by Charlie Karlsson, Börje Johansson, Kiyoshi Kobayashi and Roger R. Stough
The contributions in this volume extend our understanding about the different ways distance impacts the knowledge conversion process. Knowledge itself is a raw input into the innovation process which can then transform it into an economically useful output such as prototypes, patents, licences and new companies. New knowledge is often tacit and thus tends to be highly localized, as indeed is the conversion process. Consequently, as the book demonstrates, space or distance matter significantly in the transformation of raw knowledge into beneficial knowledge.
Studies in Regional Economic Development
Regional economic development has experienced considerable dynamism over recent years. Perhaps the most notable cases were the rise of China and India to emergent country status by the turn of the millennium. With time now for hindsight, this book identifies some of the key forces behind these development successes, namely agglomeration, clusters and entrepreneurship.
Edited by André Torre and Frédéric Wallet
Panacea or Pipedream?
Authors: Rodriguez-Pose, Andres, Hardy, Dan
Industrial and technology parks are commonly regarded as a policy panacea. They tend to be considered as the ideal instrument to alleviate an assortment of institutional, political, economic, social and ultimately, technological weaknesses and often form the centrepiece of development strategies. Yet, the real impact of industrial and technology parks, especially in emerging countries is still poorly understood. Focusing on examples from Latin America, Asia, Africa and the Middle East, the book represents a first approach to understand the potential and reality of industrial and technology parks in emerging countries. It is argued that although some parks have been successful in addressing a range of key problems, including underdevelopment, unemployment and a lack of investment, the majority have failed to deliver, rendering the promise of many parks little more than a pipedream.
From Cross-Sectional Data to Spatial Panels
Authors: Elhorst, J Paul
This book provides an overview of three generations of spatial econometric models: models based on cross-sectional data, static models based on spatial panels and dynamic spatial panel data models. The book not only presents different model specifications and their corresponding estimators, but also critically discusses the purposes for which these models can be used and how their results should be interpreted.
Editors: Kourtit, Karima, Nijkamp, Peter, Stimson, Robert (Eds.)
Modern spatial-economic systems exhibit a high degree of dynamics as a result of technological progress, demographic evolution or global change. In the past decade, an avalanche of new regional economic growth and innovation models has been put forward. This volume contains a unique collection of operational models of a strong applied nature that may be seen as original landmarks in the rich tradition of spatial-economic growth modelling. The contributors are recognized experts from different parts of the world.
CRUISE-Statistics South Africa Urban and Regional Science Conference 2017
Date
July 3-5, 2017
Location
STIAS, Stellenbosch University, South Africa.
Organization
The 3rd Biannual ISIbalo CRUISE Urban and Regional Science Conference is jointly organised by the Centre for Regional and Urban Innovation and Statistical Exploration (CRUISE) and Statistics South Africa in conjunction with the Regional Science Association International.
Aim
The conference is aimed at bringing researchers from academia, the private and public sectors and non-governmental organisations together in an effort to present and debate prevalent urban and regional evelopment issues and to share knowledge, viewpoints, methods and research outcomes around six main themes:
Theme 1 – Social, economic and structural change in cities and regions
Theme 2 – Clusters / corridors / declining / lagging areas
Theme 3 – Formal / informal business growth / decline
Theme 4 – Mobility / migration / commuting trends and issues
Theme 5 – Urban growth / housing trends and issues
Theme 6 – Governance / policy issues
Researchers in the fields of Economics, Planning, Geography, Sociology and related Social Sciences are encouraged to participate.
CONFERENCE PARTICIPATION
Participation in the conference requires an oral presentation of 20 minutes. The conference is organized in panels of 4 papers each. Presentations are selected on content and appropriateness to the conference themes.
ABSTRACTS
• Interested researchers should submit an abstract of around 250 words by e-mail not later than February 24, 2017, to: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
• Enquiries: Arul Naidoo, E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
• Successful participants will be informed by March 31, 2017.
PUBLICATION
Opportunities will be given for publication of collections of approved papers for publication in journals after the conference (publication plan to be announced during the conference).
NETWORKING
The conference is an opportunity for researchers to meet and to discuss future joint research initiatives and opportunities.
REGISTRATION
• Conference fee:
Non-RSAI members: Early Bird registration180 Euros before April 15; 250 Euros after April 15.
RSAI members: Early Bird registration 150 Euros before April 15; 200 Euros after April 15.
Participants from Africa: Early Bird registration RZA 1000 before April 15; RZA 1500 after April 15.
• Conference fee includes participation in the conference, programme and abstracts in digital format, Wi fi, secured parking, coffee-breaks and lunch.
• Downloadable registration forms: http://www.statssa.gov.za/?page_id=9282
IMPORTANT DATES
• Submission deadline for abstracts: February 24, 2017.
• Notification of abstract acceptance: March 31, 2017.
• Early bird registration and payment: 1 - 15 April 2017.
• PowerPoint Presentation.
• Full paper for publication: date to be announced during the conference.
CONFERENCE CONVENOR & ORGANIZATION
Manie Geyer
Centre for Urban and Regional Innovation and Statistical Exploration
Stellenbosch University
Stellenbosch, South Africa
Arul Naidoo
Statistics South Africa
Pretoria, South Africa
CONFERENCE VENUE
STIAS Centre
Stellenbosch University
Stellenbosch, South Africa
CONFERENCE E-MAIL & WEBSITE
Conference e-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Conference website: http://www.statssa.gov.za/?page_id=9282
ACCOMMODATION
http://www.booking.com/city/za/stellenbosch.html
http://www.stellenbosch.travel/stay-us
PROVISIONAL PROGRAMME
July 3, 2017 Monday
08:00 to 09:00 Conference registration
09:00 to 09:15 Welcome and Housekeeping
09:15 to 09:45 Address: Minister
09:45 to 10:30 Address: Member of University Executive
10:30 to 11:00 Keynote Address
11:40 to 17:20 Presentations
July 4, 2017 Tuesday
09:00 to 16:00 Presentations
July 5, 2017 Wednesday
09:00 to 14:40 Presentations
14:40 to 15:30 Publication Strategy Meeting
See attachment.
The Association for University Business and Economic Research (AUBER) is once again reaching out to regional scientists who would like take the next step and learn the nuts and bolts of operating a university research center. AUBER has established the Polzin Prize of $500 for the best paper presented at its fall conference October 21-24, 2017, in Albuquerque. Paul Polzin was the 30th President of WRSA in 1990 and was active in the SRSA in the mid-to-late 1990s. For more information about AUBER go to www.auber.org.
The 2016 winner of the Polzin Prize was Prof. Carl Bonham of the University of Hawaii. His paper it titled “Forecasting in a Mixed-Up World: Nowcasting Hawaii Tourism.”
Eligibility: To be considered for the Polzin Prize:
Process: Each eligible paper will be read by all members of an evaluation committee (the three most-recent AUBER Past Presidents) and evaluated against the criteria below. Committee members must decline to judge papers if they have the following special relationships with the author(s) of the papers submitted: relatives, students, colleagues, or co-authors. The winner will receive a $500 cash award during the Fall Conference Awards breakfast.
Submission Deadline: September 1, 2017
Submit one copy of your paper by email as a PDF attachment, without identifying author information, to Kathy Deck (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.) by the deadline. The winning paper will be announced at the AUBER Fall Conference.
The Local Organizing Committee of ERSA2017 invite you to submit your contributions to ERSA2017 in Groningen! We look forward to receiving your submissions before February 10th 2017 . Should you have any questions, please contact the Local Organizing Committee at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
The congress theme is ‘Social progress for resilient regions’, but the congress covers all fields in Regional Science. In addition to the general themes, a limited set of Special Sessions will be organized. The Special Sessions address specific and topical themes in Regional Science. Please, refer to the Submission guidelines 2017 for the procedures and important dates for each session type.
S01. Regional Resilience in the face of Natural Disasters and Climate Change (in association with the Waddenacademie)
Alessandra Faggian, Luciana Lazzeretti, Silvia Rita Sedita, Jouke van Dijk
S02. Urban Disasters and Resilience Policies of Cities
Kamila Borsekova, Peter Nijkamp
S03. The Impact of Earthquakes on Regional Housing Markets and Regional Economic Development
Roderik Ponds, Harry Garretsen, Gerard Marlet
S04. Rural Challenges and Quality of Life in Times of Change
Suzan Christiaanse, Tialda Haartsen
S05. Smart Rural Development and Beyond
André Torre, Fred Wallet
S06. New Smart Manufacturing Models for Resilient Regions
Lisa de Propris, Marco Bellandi
S07. Regional and Urban Perspectives on Individual Well-Being
Camilla Lenzi, Philip S. Morrison, Giovanni Perucca, Paolo Veneri
S08. Happy Communities: Effects of Social Interaction
Aleid Brouwer, Eveline van Leeuwen, Heike Delfmann
S09. Tourism for Resilient Regions (in association with the Waddenacademie)
Jouke van Dijk, Stefan Hartman
S10. Modern Approaches to Labor Market Polarization
Raquel Ortega-Argilés, Steven Brakman, Terzides Nikolaos
S11. Determinants of Unemployment in Regions
Stephan Brunow
S12. Real Estate and Housing (in association with ERES)
Paloma Taltavull, Gunther Maier, Arno van der Vlist
S13. Measuring Agglomeration Advantages using Innovative Geo-Data
Joachim Möller
S14. Are Cities more Productive but less Inclusive? (in association with European Commission)
Lewis Dijkstra, Laura de Dominicis
S15. Problems and Prospects of Slowly Growing Medium-sized Cities
Rüdiger Hamm, Martin Rosenfeld, Artur Ochojski, Alina Schoenberg, Ondřej Slach
S16. What is the Place of Retail in Contemporary Cities?
Krystian Heffner, Małgorzata Twardzik
S17. W on the Focus
Jesus Mur, Ana Angulo
S18. Mapping Urban Networks
Gudrun Haindlmaier
S19. Foreign Investment, Multinationals and Regional Development
Riccardo Crescenzi, Nicola Cortinovis, Frank van Oort
S20. Cross-Border Cooperation as a key Factor of Resilience (in association with the European Commission)
Nathalie Verschelde, Lewis Dijkstra, Jean Peyrony
S21. Walled Territories
Andrea Székely, Thomaz Dentinho
S22. Spatial Demography in Regional Science
Rachel Franklin, Jacques Poot
S23. Counterfactual Methods for Regional Policy Evaluation
Elena Ragazzi, Marco Mariani, Lisa Sella
S24. The EU Cohesion Policy after the Crisis and Brexit
Riccardo Crescenzi, Ugo Fratesi, Vassilis Monastiriotis
S25. More than Planning: Land Use and its Policies in the OECD (in association with the OECD)
Abel Schumann
S26. Issues in Urban Policy
Johan Lundberg
S27. Place-based Policies and International Embeddedness
Dirk Dohse, Dirk Fornahl, Robert Gold
S28. Territorial Policy Impact Assessments in CGE Models
Martin Aarøe Christensen, Francesco di Comite
S29. Spatial CGE Modeling and Transport Issues
Tomoki Ishikura, Atsushi Koike
S30. Trade and Entrepreneurship for Growth in all Regions (in association with the OECD)
Alexander Lembcke, Paolo Veneri
S31. The Social Dimension of Entrepreneurship in the Context of Economic Crisis
Veronique Schutjens, Darja Reuschke
S32. National and International Locational Preferences of Firms
Dario Musolino, Ilaria Mariotti
S33. Urban Economics: Markets, Real Estate and Planning
Philip McCann, Jouke van Dijk, Arno van der Vlist
S34. A new Industrial and Regional Policy for European Growth and Integration (by invitation only)
Riccardo Cappellin, Enrico Ciciotti
G01. Social Progress for Resilient Regions (Resilience, Well-being, Inequality, Segregation, Poverty)
G02. Regional Economic Development
G03. Regional or Urban Labour Markets
G04. Migration, Commuting or Mobility
G05. Infrastructure, Transportation or Accessibility
G06. Innovation and Entrepreneurship
G07. Benefits of Agglomeration
G08. Education
G09. Tourism
G10. Transitional economies
G11. International Trade and FDI
G12. Regional or Urban Policy, Governance
G13. Institutions
G14. Real Estate and Housing
G15. Regional Finance, Investment or Capital Markets
G16. Convergence/Divergence
G17. Rural Issues
G18. Environmental Issues or Sustainable Development
G19. Location of Economic Activity
G20. Methods in Regional Science or Urban Economics
ERSA2017 offers four session types you can submit to: Refereed Sessions, Special Sessions, Young Scientists/Epainos Sessions and Ordinary Sessions (R-Sessions, SS, YSS and O-Sessions).
In R-Sessions, SS and YSS you will receive ample presentation time (~30 minute slots) and your contribution will be assigned a discussant. Initial submission to these sessions is on the basis of an extended abstract or a draft paper (before Feb 10th). Each contributor must have uploaded a full (draft) paper before June 9th 2017.
O-Sessions allow for presentation times of 15-20 minutes and feedback is provided by the audience present. Submission to O-sessions is on the basis of an abstract.
Dear colleague,
We are pleased to announce the International Congress on High-speed Rail: Technologies and Long Term Impacts to be held at the University of Castilla La Mancha (Spain) on October 4th-6th, 2017.
Considering that High-speed Rail has been in operation for more than half a century in Japan and thirty-five years in Europe, this Congress aims to discuss and debate the long-term Technological, Socio-economic and Transport/Territorial impacts of High-speed Rail and to develop a better understanding of the planning criteria for the future.
As you can see in the attached Call for Papers, contributions are welcome on a wide range of topics and participants are encouraged to take part in this event by sending an abstract before April 5th, 2017. Due to the relevance of the topic, our aim is to contribute with the publication of different Special Issues in high-quality journals gathering some of the papers presented at the Congress (authors interested in this possibility should consider the requirements established in the Congress Website).
For more details, please check the Congress web page:
Finally, we would be really grateful if you could distribute this Call for Papers among those of your colleagues that may be interested on the Congress topics.
We are looking forward to seeing you next October in Spain.
Kind regards,
Inmaculada Mohíno
PhD in Territory, Infrastructures and Environment
City and Regional Planning Research Group
University of Castilla-La Mancha
Avda. Camilo José Cela s/n – 13071 Ciudad Real (Spain)
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Cell: (+34) 626.24.55.46
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This special issue seeks to explore the relationship between the use of targeted tax exemptions or breaks and other forms of incentives to attract and retain businesses and ensure a prosperous local economy. Targeted incentives refer to exemptions in taxes provided to selected firms as opposed to across the board tax cuts. The special issue seeks to address broad themes like, Do targeted incentives contribute to or reduce economic freedom? Can targeted incentives generate a prosperous regional economy? Are targeted incentive deals an example of cronyism?
The special issue is receptive to papers pursuing these themes using a variety of methods, including literature reviews, meta-analyses, and case studies, in addition to theory and empirics, as well as papers addressing a variety of specific topics related to the broad themes.
Papers for the special issue could address topics including: A review of economists’ analysis and opinions regarding economic development over time; the diffusion of incentive programs across jurisdictions; whether government revenue lost due to incentives leads to increases in tax rates; whether incentive deals approximate incentive-compatible contracts between local governments and businesses; are political connections indispensable to receive targeted incentive deals; whether mobility and interjurisdictional competition increases the ability of less politically connected firms to incentives; whether economic freedom and prosperity is increasing or decreasing in regional economies or states that have most aggressively pursued targeted incentives for business, and whether the welfare effects of targeted tax breaks differ from financial assistance to firms.
Papers must be submitted by May 1, 2017, with the special issue to be published in late 2017.
If you would like to discuss a topic for the special issue prior to submitting an abstract, please contact the editor of the special issue directly (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).
To prepare papers for submission to the special issue, sessions will be organized at the Southern Regional Science Association (SRSA) meetings in Memphis, March 30-April 1, 2017. The Mercatus Center and Institute for Humane Studies have travel awards available to enable authors from selected papers to attend the meetings and present their papers for feedback prior to submission for the special issue. Papers can be submitted for the special issue without being presented at the SRSA conference, and papers selected for the sessions are not assured of acceptance in the special issue.
Sessions Information
The Mercatus Center at George Mason University, the Institute for Humane Studies, and the Manuel H. Johnson Center for Political Economy at Troy University will organize sessions at the 2017 Southern Regional Science Association meetings in Memphis, March 30 – April 1, to help prepare papers for submission to a special issue of The Review of Regional Studies on the general subject of “Targeted Economic Development Incentives, Economic Freedom, and Prosperity.” The call for papers for the special issue can be viewed here. Two sessions will be organized at the SRSA meetings. Travel support for one author of papers selected for the sessions will be available from the sponsoring organizations, and there will also be a dinner and reception for the contributors to the sessions during the conference.
To be considered for the sessions, authors should submit an abstract of not more than 300 words detailing the topic, methods, and expected contribution of their paper by January 10, 2017 to Scott Eastman (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.). Authors of papers selected for the sessions will be notified by January 20, 2017, and a completed draft of papers for the conference will be due by March 1, 2017. In addition to consideration for the special issue of The Review of Regional Studies, papers will be additionally considered for publication as Mercatus Working Papers.
Please share with others who might be interested.
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.