TY - BOOK AU - Coe,Neil M. AU - Kelly,Philip F. AU - Yeung,Henry Wai-Chung TI - Economic geography: a contemporary introduction SN - 9781119389552 U1 - 330.9 23 PY - 2020/// CY - Hoboken, NJ PB - Wiley-Blackwell KW - Economic geography KW - Economic development N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Geography: how do we think spatially? -- The economy: what does it mean? -- Dynamics of capitalism: why is economic growth so uneven? -- Networks: how is the world economy interconnected? -- Transnational corporations: how do they keep it all together? -- Labour: are migrant workers the new normal? -- Consumers: who decides what we buy? -- Finance: how has capital become so powerful? -- States: who runs the economy? -- International institutions: how do they govern and foster global development? -- Environment: does global climate change change everything? -- Clusters: why does proximity matter? -- Identities: are economies gendered and racialized? -- Alternatives: can we create diverse economies? -- Economic geography: intellectual journeys and future horizons N2 - "Economic Geography is an engaging and accessible introduction to the different ways modern economic geographers understand, analyze, and interpret economic processes. This comprehensive text addresses significant questions relevant to contemporary economic life, from the activities of transnational corporations to issues surrounding workplaces and consumption. It encourages readers to explore how spatial patterns, places, networks, and territories shape large-scale economic processes. Accessible, highly-illustrated material presents fresh insights from the field--complemented by relatable, real-world examples that help students understand the social, cultural, and political contexts underpinning global economic processes. Now in its third edition, this extensively revised and updated textbook retains the features and thematic structure that have proved popular with students and instructors alike, while adding exciting new content. New chapters explore how the global economy and global development are institutionalized and governed, the economic geographies of global climate change, economic practices outside the capitalist mainstream, the role of migrants in labour markets, global production networks, and more"-- ER -