R. Sugden and J.R. Wilson*
Abstract
|
There is
a popular view that the world is moving towards a 'globalised', 'new'
economy, and that this implies a strong role for regionalisation of some
form. This paper provides a framework for analyzing and understanding these
trends. We offer a conceptualisation of globalisation that captures three
widely recognised features: it's cross disciplinary character, its roots in a
changing geography, and its association with alterations in transport,
information and communication technologies. From this context, it is argued
that knowledge and governance are fundamental to the attainment of economic
prosperity, and our analysis leads to a distinction between types of
globalisation. Acknowledging the disagreement over the role of nations and
regions in today's globalisation process, but also recognising the common
view that territory is in some sense important, we introduce the notion of
locality. The approach is fluid, allowing consideration of different layers
of locality and accommodating different communities. Our discussion goes on
to consider 'networking'. It focuses on networking in production governance
and emphasises the possibility of networks within and across localities,
including multilocational networks. This is explored in the context of the
'world cities' literature. We see the ultimate challenge as moving towards a
scenario where all actors in each locality, and in the communities within and
across localities, participate in the democratic governance of their
development. Achieving this would imply the identification and pursuit of a
new, multidisciplinary research agenda. |
|
Keywords: Globalisation, New Economy,
Regions, Production Governance, Knowledge, Networks. |
|
JEL Codes: F02, R00, P11, I20 |
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There is currently a
popular view that the world is undergoing profound changes in the relationships
through which it is organised. In particular, it is argued that a 'globalised'
economy is emerging, facilitated by and associated with 'new' technologies and
practices. Moreover, there is further consensus that within this 'globalised',
'new' economy, regionalisation of some form is important; indeed, the term
'glocalisation' is often used to refer to the co-existence of 'globalisation'
and 'localisation'. The aim of this paper is to address these topical issues
from a particular perspective. It seeks to provide a framework for analysing
and understanding current trends, and to suggest an approach that highlights
appropriate ways forward in the context of the opportunities and dangers
presented by a 'global', 'new' economy.
Our perspective is rooted
in a particular view of what it means to be prosperous. We suggest that
'prosperity' is fundamentally linked to economic 'development', defined in
terms of the process by which a group of people moves towards their own aims
and objectives.1 This focus signals a need for people to be
involved in the planning for their prosperity, and thus in the decision-making
processes affecting the societies where they live. Consequently, the governance
of economic development, or of 'production', is seen as crucial. Moreover,
'production' refers to more than the production of goods and services, and
hence material prosperity. It also encompasses the production of knowledge,
health, and general social outcomes, leading to a broad notion of prosperity
that reflects the breadth of people's aims and objectives. Our entire analysis
of 'globalisation' and the 'new' economy is grounded in this concern with
governance. For example, like many other commentators we see knowledge and
learning as crucial. However, our focus on knowledge is not from a conventional
market perspective. Instead, we emphasise the active and dynamic properties of
knowledge, seeing it as contributing to (and in turn generated by)
participation in governance.
This perspective sees
'locality' and 'community' as important units of analysis, as it is from here
that participation in governance is built. It is therefore consistent with the
popularly-held view that regionalisation of some form is important in a 'new'
and 'global' economy. While many authors have debated the roles of nations,
regions and cities, we introduce the notion of 'locality'. Our approach is
fluid, allowing consideration of different layers of locality, and
accommodating the different communities that exist within and across these
layers. It thus departs from fixed notions of cities, regions or nations.
Rather, it focuses on the potential for network relationships within and across
localities, including multilocational networks. We see the ultimate
challenge as moving towards a scenario where all actors in each locality, and
in the communities within and across localities, participate in the democratic
governance of their development. Significant questions remain as to how this
can be achieved in a 'global' and 'new' economy. A key implication, we argue,
is the need to identify and pursue a new, multidisciplinary research agenda,
fusing the economic, political, cultural and social.
The paper is structured as
follows. Section II analyses 'globalisation' and 'new' economy. We identify (in
Section II.i) a broad approach that emphasises three widely-recognised
features: globalisation's cross disciplinary character, its roots in a changing
geography, and its association with altered transport, information and communication
technologies. We suggest (in Section II.ii) that governance and knowledge are
particularly important concepts in responding to and shaping globalisation. We
distinguish between a process harnessed to further the prosperity of a few, and
one harnessed to further the prosperity of all people; between elite and
democratic globalisation. The link between globalisation, the new economy
and a concern with urban and regional settings is pursued in Section III. We
argue (in Section III.i) the appropriateness of analysing development in terms
of 'localities'. Attention is then focused on the significance of networking
(in Section III.ii), and our points are illustrated through a critique of the
World Cities paradigm. We conclude in Section IV with comments on an agenda for
multidisciplinary research, grounded in principles of inclusive governance,
knowledge and networks.
Scholte (2000) notes that
"in spite of a deluge of publications on the subject, our analyses of
globalisation tend to remain conceptually inexact, empirically thin,
historically and culturally illiterate, normatively shallow and politically
naïve. Although globalisation is widely assumed to be crucially important, we
generally have scant idea what, more precisely, it entails".2 This
is associated with 'globalisation' being a truly multifaceted phenomenon, with
implications that encompass not just the economic but also the social,
political, cultural and geographical. Radice (2000), for example, notes that "globalisation has been a
prominent topic among geographers and sociologists as well as economists and
political scientists, and is studied within every paradigm, from neoclassical
economics to postmodern social theory to realist international relations theory
to Marxism".3 In this regard, Vellinga (2000) comments that
it has the characteristics of a 'theoretical umbrella', in a similar way to
dependency theory.
One approach is to follow
Kudrle's (1999) suggestion that globalisation be considered with regard to the
specific intent of those using the term.4
Economic definitions of globalisation, for example, are frequently rooted in
market analysis; De la Dehesa (2000) refers to it as "a dynamic process of
growing liberty and world integration in the markets for labour, goods,
services, technology and capital".5
Others, including scholars in different disciplines, root their definitions in
alternatives to the market, focusing instead on cultural, social, spatial or
political factors, or indeed on non-market aspects of the economy. Waters
(2001), for example, argues that the key figure in the formalisation and
specification of 'globalisation' is the sociologist Robertson, who refers
"both to the compression of the world and the intensification of
consciousness of the world as a whole".6 From
the geographer's perspective the definition differs yet again, with the focus
shifting to the scale and scope of territories such as cities or regions. For
example, Brenner (1999) conceives globalisation as "a reterritorialisation
of both socioeconomic and political-institutional spaces that unfolds
simultaneously upon multiple, superimposed, geographical scales".7
Further debates occur
around the extent, impact and consequences of globalisation, the forces and
causes behind globalisation, the policies to be pursued in response to
globalisation, and even the chronology of globalisation.8 With
regard to the latter, for example, many question whether 'globalisation' is a
new phenomenon. De la Dehesa (2000) notes that a similar process, of a form
almost as intense as that which we see now, was evident between 1870 and 1914.
Hirst and Thompson (1999) go further and state that "in some respects, the
current international economy is less open and integrated than the
regime that prevailed from 1870 to 1914".9 Such
arguments clearly depend on the definition of globalisation that underpin them.
If the issue is 'market' globalisation then these authors may have a strong
case. In contrast, if the issue encompasses wider factors, then it would be
difficult to deny that those commentators claiming 'globalisation' to be a
'new' phenomenon, influenced by the likes of jet travel and computers, also
have some degree of credibility to their arguments.
What is perhaps clear above
all else, however, is that throughout the world there is a development towards
levels and forms of global interaction that are significantly different
to previous intercourse at international level. The difference is highlighted
by Scholte (2000) in terms of the importance of relations that transcend
borders. He argues that globalisation is a "new and distinctive"
phenomenon only when it is conceptualised in terms of
"deterritorialisation".10 He
suggests that "the proliferation and spread of supraterritorial - or what
we can alternatively term 'transworld' or 'transborder' - connections brings an
end to what could be called 'territorialsism', that is, a situation where
social geography is entirely territorial".11
Scholte's use of 'trans' as a prefix is based upon the notion of transcending
territorial space.12 Unfortunately, perhaps, the prefix also has connotations
of transversing, of merely crossing territories. The latter has very different
implications to transcending, and connotations that might better describe what
Scholte (2000) terms the "tens of thousands of global companies",13 the
transnational corporations. Moreover, he does not explore the implications of multiterritorial
activity, an example of which might be the multinationalism advocated by
Cowling and Sugden (1999). This multiterritorialisation can be argued to imply
'of many territories, rooted in and growing out of many territories', and can
be seen as a route to transcending territories.
The importance of
transcending borders is also associated with recognition of recent advances in
transport, information and communication technologies. These advances have
markedly eased previous difficulties inherent in interaction over large
distances. Not only have the costs (both actual and time) of long-distance
transport and telecommunications fallen dramatically, but the last decade has
seen the advent and evolution of email and the Internet. These new technologies
herald the cheap and almost instantaneous transfer of vast amounts of
information across the entire wired-up world, and create the potential (as yet
only partially realised) for a new 'layer' of market and non-market activities
that are detached from physical localities.14
Economic activity focused
around these developments is commonly termed the 'new' economy, although there
is a degree of confusion as to what, exactly, this constitutes. For some
authors it refers simply to technological advances. Gordon (2000), for example,
defines it as "the post-1995 acceleration in the rate of technical change
in information technology together with the development of the Internet",
and seeks to compare it with the great inventions that have previously
transformed economies.15 For others, however, the 'new' economy is a
wider phenomenon, encompassing both new technologies and the emerging global
economic relationships that they help to facilitate and that in turn condition
their use.16 In this sense the 'new' economy is something
deeper, with roots in the capitalist organisation of economic activity. Reich
(2001), for example, points to a society where "we can get exactly what we
want from almost anywhere at the lowest price and highest value".17 The
roots of such developments are seen to lie in modern capitalism, although
advancements in technology combine in driving them to a 'new' level, primarily
because it becomes increasingly easier to transfer information, and thus, it is
claimed, to compare, contrast and make informed decisions.18
This has similarities to the argument by Radice (2000) that "globalisation
can best be understood as an aspect of capitalism".19
Indeed, it is difficult to separate either 'globalisation' or the 'new' economy
from the capitalist context in which they have evolved and are evolving, and
thus also difficult to separate them from one another.20
Drawing these ideas
together, a useful starting point is to conceptualise globalisation broadly,
capturing its cross disciplinary character, recognising its roots in a changing
geography and identifying its association with alterations in transport,
information and communication technologies. In essence, we suggest that
globalisation is a multidisciplinary process in which a new geography and new
technologies imply changes in activity and behaviour. It is a process in
which the constraints of geography on economic, political, social and cultural
activity and behaviour change, becoming less territorialised and more trans- or
multi- territorial.21 People are more or less aware of these
changes, implying concern with how they respond to and shape the processes
occurring around them. Moreover, our focus on a multidisciplinary approach is
distinct from a mere cross- or inter- disciplinary concern; it is not simply
that globalisation is relevant in various disciplines, rather it is that the
process can only be fully understood from a perspective that fuses various
disciplines together.
Whilst such a broad
conceptualisation provides a solid foundation for analysis, it has a strength
that is also a weakness; in encompassing many perspectives it fails to identify
and highlight all that we see as especially crucial. This probably makes it
more widely acceptable but at the same time less interesting. We return,
therefore, to Kudrle (1999) and suggest a refinement, a narrowing, that
accommodates the concerns of its users. More particularly, for an analysis of the
implications of globalisation for economic development we suggest that the
conceptualisation of globalisation needs to incorporate two key, related
issues: knowledge and governance.
Knowledge (and learning) is
a key driver behind the ability to respond to the changes that are occurring
with globalisation. This suggests that it is a fundamental concern. Indeed, it
is no co-incidence that knowledge has become acknowledged in the mainstream
development agenda as perhaps the key issue at a time when the
forces of 'globalisation' have accelerated in conjunction with new
technologies.22 Given movement towards a 'new' economy, where
knowledge is seen to be the key to realising returns,23 it
has become generally accepted that education and the generation and diffusion
of knowledge are vital and central components to development processes.24 While
there are hints that knowledge could play a wider role in the development of
economies,25 the standard premise for these arguments is
essentially a market perspective. Knowledge is seen as important in terms of
the value it can add to production processes, and crucially, therefore, the
ability to attract investment, in particular foreign direct investment (FDI).
Indeed, a primary concern from this perspective is with bridging knowledge gaps
so that localities can 'compete' on a more equal footing, or extending
knowledge gaps so that localities can enhance their 'competitive advantage'. In
a sense, therefore, the argument is very similar to that for flexible labour
markets; like flexible (cheap) labour, knowledge is seen as a route to
competitive advantage.
While we recognise the
so-called competitive imperative for knowledge in a 'new' and 'global' economy,
our concern is primarily from an alternative perspective. We see knowledge and
learning as central to development, central to each individual (and the
communities that they form) realising their potential. It is important because
it affords people the opportunity to engage effectively in the decision-making
processes that govern development. In turn, this enables development to reflect
accurately the aims and objectives of localities.
The significance of
decision-making processes is argued elsewhere. Consider, for example, the
governance of transnational corporations,26 of
what Scholte (2000) calls "global companies". The typical modern
corporation is governed by an elite, only a subset of those with an interest in
its activities. To govern is to make the strategic decisions, to 'control' a corporation.
It is an elite that determines a corporation's strategy and therefore its
impact. The result is strategic failure: concentration of strategic
decision-making power in the hands of an elite implies a failure to govern
production in the interests of the community at large. To avoid such failure,
the democratisation of governance is required. Achieving this would imply a
shift from governance designed to yield prosperity for an elite. Rather, there
would be governance in search of a prosperity that is based on the concerns of
everyone interested in a corporation's activities.27
More generally, a similar
argument for democratisation applies to all aspects of economies, and to
economies as a whole. Take, as another example, the position of so-called
'developing' countries.28
Since the early 1980s their economic prosperity has been largely influenced by
the 'Washington Consensus',29 an
approach that emphasises policy measures such as fiscal discipline, financial
liberalisation, trade liberalisation, privatisation, deregulation, and limited
government intervention. The extent of convergence over these policies has been
remarkable over the last two decades,30 as
has the perceived lack of progress. The structural adjustment programmes,
through which policies have been transmitted, have been widely and heavily
criticised, and for large numbers of people Washington Consensus policies are
associated with continuing poverty and rising inequality. This strikes at the
credibility of, and hence support for, the development agenda, something that
can be seen in the collapse of World Trade Organisation (WTO) talks in Seattle
in November 1999, and protests wherever the forces at the core of the consensus
meet.31 The dwindling support for this agenda has
recently been recognised by the institutions at the heart of the consensus.32
However, while re-evaluation is clearly necessary, it is important first to
reflect on why the Washington Consensus has failed to generate the
necessary success and support. We suggest that the explanation is an exclusion
from governance, a failure to engage people in the decisions and processes
surrounding their development. Evolution of the Washington Consensus and
encouragement of a certain sort of private sector economy has been associated
with monopoly power and a denial of access to the 'global' economy for the vast
majority of potential participants.33
This denial not only implies an absence of provision, an absence of material
welfare, it even implies a failure to include the majority in the determination
of the aims and objctives of economic activity, the most fundamental of
strategic decisions faced by an economy. This is an exclusion from determining
the aims and objectives of development, from determining what is meant by
'prosperity'.
The especial significance
of knowledge is that it is vital for the democratisation of decision-making. In
particular, it helps to free people to participate fully in the governance of
their locality; to become involved in the (formal and informal, interrelated
networks for the) governance of firms, institutions, government and other
economic actors. Moreover, where effective governance does not exist, it helps
to free people to ensure that it becomes established and evolves towards
effectiveness.
In this sense, we view
knowledge as essentially active and dynamic. The crucial issue is
not one of knowledge of 'facts', rather it is far deeper. Criticising
educational methods that "discourage original thinking", Fromm (1941)
argues against the "pathetic superstition . that by knowing more and more
facts one arrives at knowledge of reality".34
Similarly, good governance necessitates that each interested person be able to
think about and therefore participate fully in the governance process. Each
must be active, alert to the necessity for certain types of knowledge, able to
use their voice in the pursuit of that knowledge, able to use that knowledge in
influencing strategic ways forward.35
Moreover, while information and education give people the basic ability and
confidence to participate actively in the governance of their development,
participation itself is a learning process that generates further knowledge. In
particular, it generates knowledge around practical issues of governance; it
allows localities to establish what works for them, and what does not. In turn,
localities learn more about economic democracy, which may enable improvements
in governance that further increase the benefits and incentives for
participation. The idea, then, is of a virtuous circle where localities feel
their way forward; evolve towards ways in which they can govern themselves to
ensure attainment of their own development aims and objectives.
This is in line with the
observation by Hirschman (1971), in comparing 'exit' and 'voice', that
"while exit requires nothing but a clearcut either-or decision, voice is
essentially an art evolving in new directions".36 He
goes on to argue that this presents an inherent bias towards exit that tends to
"atrophy the development of the art of voice".37 A
similar argument could be made with regard to participation in the governance
of localities; development of the virtuous circle might be hindered by the
difficulties and frustrations of ensuring democratic involvement.
The challenge, therefore,
is to set a virtuous circle in motion, so that the active and dynamic concept
of knowledge can be realised. Knowledge that contributes to (and in turn is
generated by) involvement in governance is crucial to the way in which people
respond to 'globalisation' and the 'new' economy. It essentially determines
whether these broad processes can be harnessed to further the prosperity of a
locality, as defined by the locality itself, or whether they are geared solely
towards serving 'elite' or 'external' interests. Moreover, a full understanding
of the art of democracy as central to economic prosperity requires
multi-discipliniary analysis.
Reflecting these key
issues, we suggest that globalisation can be conceptionalised as a
multidisciplinary process in which a new geography and new technologies imply
changes in activity and behaviour, and in which knowledge and governance are
fundamental to the attainment of economic prosperity. In addition, our
discussion points to a distinction between elite globalisation and democratic
globalisation. The former refers to a process harnessed to further the
prosperity of an elite, the latter to a process harnessed to further the
prosperity of all people in a locality.
We have argued that
globalisation is seen to present a new level of analysis for economic,
social and political problems, or, at least, one that is changing
significantly in its nature. Within this new analytical context, specific
territories - whether these are 'cities', 'regions', 'nations' or something
different - might be argued to play an integral part in the changes currently
occurring. Likewise, the responses of territories to globalisation might be
considered significant.
Unsurprisingly, given the
lack of consensus surrounding all aspects of 'globalisation', there is
disagreement over the role of nations in a 'global' and 'new' economy. This
debate is not new, and was addressed in 1918 by Bucharin, who contrasted the
dual trends of nationalisation and internationalisation, arguing that the
latter was built around the former. More recently, authors such as Hirst and Thompson
(1999), Wade (1996), Ruigrok and van Tulder (1995) and Gordon (1988) have
presented the case for what Radice (2000) terms 'progressive nationalism'. For
these authors, as with Bucharin, nations still have a key role to play in
economic and social activity. This is in contrast to what some see as the
vision of a truly 'global' economy; a borderless world made up of fully
'global' companies, in which nation states have little role. Kindleberger
(1969) hinted at such a scenario, asserting that "the nation-state is just
about through as an economic unit. containerization., airbuses, and the like
will not permit sovereign independence of the nation-state in economic
affairs".38 More recently, similar arguments have been
associated with authors such as Ohmae (1995, 1990) and Reich (1992), although
Radice (2000) warns that their work has often been caricatured.
Despite these differences,
a common thread in the literature is that globalisation processes are
inherently associated with 'regionalisation' of some form. For example,
Ohmae (1995) argues that while traditional 'nation states' have become
unnatural units in a global economy, 'region states', based on economically
functional rather than political boundaries, are the right size and scale to
tap into this economy. Related to this is Storper's (1997) analysis of the
resurgence of regional economies, stressing the key role of regional
communities and firms as the basic building blocks of an increasingly connected
world. In some sense, therefore, there is a clearly acknowledged regional
dimension to globalisation, presenting a strong premise for looking at
'regions' as important units of analysis. Moreover, the imperative is twofold,
given our concern with knowledge, learning and communication. This is partly
because formal channels of education and learning - such as schools, colleges
and universities - are often regionally based. In addition, people communicate
and learn by virtue of living in proximity to one another, including
geographical proximity.39
This implies that knowledge, learning and communication require consideration
at a regional level, contributing to the need to examine in more detail what
might be meant by the concept of a region.
Vellinga (2000) argues that
"regions are mostly products of history.[that] cannot always be defined in
a strict geographical sense. The boundaries are often not clearly delimited and
may shift with changes in the development process. The formation of these
regions results from the development of material interests and related social
classes and power relations in a socio-spatial context. This process will often
also involve the formation of communities of belief and identity".40
Along with acknowledgement that regions are not fixed entities, there is
a clear distinction made here between 'region' and 'community'. This suggests
the possibility of a layered approach to the units with which we analyse
development, so as to avoid rigid, fixed categorisations (see also Marshall,
1919)41 and so as to incorporate different notions of
'community'. In particular, we suggest that it is useful to refer to the
concept of 'locality' as distinct from 'region' or 'nation', terms that often
carry specific, fixed connotations. We define a 'locality' as a local
geographical area characterised by certain common institutions, practices and
identity, and by the relationships that these foster between actors. Such a
definition gives fluidity, allowing us to consider different 'layers' of
locality, and to accommodate the different communities that exist within and across
these layers.42
To illustrate, consider a
large town or city. Whilst a geographical district within the city might be
considered a specific locality, so too might the city as a whole and indeed the
wider area of which the city is a part. One possibility is to think of these
distinct entities as part of an inter-related whole, encompassing not one but
many localities. The 'first' layer comprises localities defined around local
shops and firms, churches, government, media and grass roots organisations. For
each such locality, however, there are likely to be strong links in terms of
employment, administration and social factors with other areas in the city
(defined in the same way). What happens in one locality will effect others and
in this sense each cannot be isolated. In particular, some areas within a city
may be focal points for a significant firm or institution - such as a
university - that is important to many other parts of the city. Similarly, the
centre of the city may be important to other 'localities', although this is
said to be changing with the new economy.43 The
idea of 'locality' can therefore be seen in terms of intertwined layers.
Specific areas of a city can be 'localities', as can the city as a whole, or
the geographical area encompassing nearby towns and villages that rely on the
city. This is illustrated in the diagram in Appendix 1.44
Such an approach also
allows us to incorporate different concepts of community into the analysis.
Dewey (1916), for example, defines community in terms of common aims and beliefs,
and their communication: "there is more than a verbal tie between the
words common, community, and communication. Men live in a community in virtue
of the things which they have in common; and communication is the way in which
they come to possess things in common. What they must have in common in order
to form a community or society are aims, beliefs, aspirations, knowledge - a
common understanding - like-mindedness as the sociologists say".45 This
can be applied to the 'first' layer of locality, existing around local shops
and institutions. The people that occupy these localities are communities by
nature of living together and communicating around such local institutions. A
layered approach, however, also recognises that communities exist across and
within these localities on work, social, religious, ethnic and other grounds.
Thus there are also layered 'communities' intertwined with layered
'localities', the likelihood being that individuals are members of several
different but related communities spanning different layers of locality.
The fluidity of this
approach is in contrast to a more rigid analysis focused on fixed historical or
administrative regions, which often do not correspond naturally to social,
economic or cultural relationships. Thompson (2000), for example, notes that in
Southern Africa "'national' borders were drawn by Europeans, who were
quite ignorant of the family and community borders that they were
partitioning". In discussing the Southern African Development Community
(SADC) she goes on to argue that the "member states' approach to
regionalism rejects 'separate development' of the individual countries, which
were just as falsely (and forcefully) divided as the ethnic groups within South
Africa".46 None of this is to deny, of course, that a
conceptual analysis based fluidly on 'localities' can be translated into
administrative regions (for example, nations, provinces) for the purposes of
policy implementation.
Implicit in this approach
is the concept of 'networking'. The 'first', most 'local', layer of locality is
defined around institutions, and the relationships and communication that these
facilitate between actors. Likewise, the concept of intertwined layers relies
on networks of relationships between actors and communities across localities.
Indeed, relationships across localities need not be confined to localities in
geographical proximity. For example, in a 'global' and 'new' economy it might
seem natural that localities, and actors within localities, could also form
networks for co-operation, competition and exchange of experiences that are
multinational in nature, transcending previous geographical borders.
These processes, both
within and across localities, might be fostered by appropriate use of the
Internet. For some time there have been websites that facilitate networking
among people sharing common interests, views, beliefs, etc.. Theoretically this
has allowed the establishment of communities that span localities, although
inclusion is limited to those that have access to the Internet. New ventures in
the UK are demonstrating the potential for similar networking to take place in
the context of geographical localities.47 A
website called myvillage.com, for example, separates London into distinct
'villages', and provides a forum for businesses, organisations and individuals
to network and share information with others in each locality. There are
concerns over the inclusiveness of an Internet forum and the editing of the
site itself. However, such ventures demonstrate how people might network within
localities in a 'new' economy, and also provide scope for the type of
networking across localities that we have suggested. Someone living in one
London 'village', for example, could bring issues to other 'village' forums
where there may be a related interest, thus learning from and contributing to
what happens in neighbouring 'villages'.
Following from our
arguments in the previous Section, the governance of networks is a key
consideration in terms of achieving prosperity that is recognised by all actors
within each inter-linked 'locality'. Our concern is essentially with the
governance of 'production' within and across localities, as it is 'production'
that determines the 'prosperity' of communities. Moreover, 'production' is not
confined to the production of goods and services, but also encompasses the
production of knowledge, health, and general social well-being. In turn, these
form part of the virtuous circle that can facilitate greater involvement in
governance networks, and a voice for everyone in their collective prosperity. This
returns the discussion to the distinction between 'elite' and 'democratic'
globalisation. We advocate governance networks that are neither designed to
serve elites nor hijacked by elites, be these internal to a locality or
external, and that require more than mere co-operation and partnership across
'stakeholders'.48 Democratic governance is not merely about
this; democracy requires more than co-operation and partnerships. Exactly
what is required, however, is something that economics, or indeed other
branches of social science, are not best placed to analyse alone. By nature,
understanding democracy and the welfare effects of alternative democratic
processes requires a multi-disciplinary approach.49
This poses a significant challenge for practitioners across the social
sciences.
As for the view that
localities and actors could form networks in the absence of geographical
proximity, in one way these are already observed; the concept of 'global'
networks of urban localities is illustrated, for example, by the growing
literature on 'world cities'.50
Fundamental to the world cities literature, however, is a hierarchical
structure of city relationships; one of the theses comprising Friedman's (1986)
seminal 'world city hypothesis' is that "key cities throughout the world
are used by global capital as 'basing points' in the spatial organization and
articulation of production and markets. The resulting linkages make it possible
to arrange world cities into a complex spatial hierarchy".51
Such linkages are transnational in the sense that they transverse localities,
with transnational capital and transnational corporations as the driving force.
They do not, however, imply a transcending of localities in a way that is truly
multinational. In particular, the existence of a hierarchy serves to
remove the democracy inherent in networking between equal partners. In
addition, basing the relationships on transnational capital removes the
fundamental rooting of networks in their constituent localities.
A key implication of the
'world cities' literature is that the hierarchy of cities is determined by the
location of transnational capital. For Friedman (1986), 'world cities' are the
"basing points" for transnational capital,52
implying a concentration of corporate headquarters, while for Sassen (1991)
they are seen as "centers of finance and as centers for global servicing
and management", implying a key role in servicing transnational capital.
Both approaches result in a hierarchy of cities in which the location of global
capital is seen as paramount.53
Moreover, the links between cities in such a model are also defined by flows
(of information, capital and personnel) between transnational firms and
institutions. Indeed, Castells (1996) focuses his analysis on flows between
cities, what he terms the 'network society'. He argues that "the
global city is not a place, but a process. A process by which the centers of
production and consumption of advanced services, and their ancillary local
societies, are connected in a global network, while simultaneously downplaying
the linkages with their hinterlands, on the basis of information flows".54
This suggests a concept of networking between 'world cities' that is not fully
rooted locally; it crosses above the localities comprising and surrounding
cities, and is dominated by the agenda of a transnational elite. The desire to
attract and maintain this transnational elite has implications for the way in
which cities across the hierarchical spectrum, from 'world cities' to
'peripheral cities', are able to govern their own development.
The city of Birmingham
(England) is an interesting example. It has undergone a substantial
transformation over the last two decades, stimulating a debate over its alleged
success. In particular, Henry and Passmore (1999) show concern that in its
quest to become a 'world city', Birmingham has rejected its local roots and
instead sought to create an enclave for international capital in the city
centre. They argue that the flagship development projects have created "a
space for the national and international business/tourist class, which is
increasingly divorced from its regional and local context", and that
"a city is being made to show and entertain investors rather than for
local people to live in".55
This is the danger inherent in an approach to city development that essentially
aims to attract an elite. Arguments that the wealth that this elite brings to
the city will 'trickle-down' to benefit all of its citizens miss the point.
What matters is that all citizens have the opportunity and ability to become involved
in the democratic governance of their locality, not least to define the
'prosperity' that they seek from development. In turn, this principle must be
reflected in relationships with other localities, whether in geographical
proximity or not, so that networking is truly multilocational (rather
than simply translocational in a transversing sense).
In the case of Birmingham,
Henry and Passmore (1999) suggest that future development should involve an
embracing of the city's multicultural heritage, "drawing on the 'rooted
globalisations' of Birmingham's people".56 One
specific suggestion is to establish a centre for cultural hybridity, which
"could overcome the prejudices which reduce participation in the present
city centre and inhibit an honest engagement with our multicultural
selves".57 Hubbard (2001), while re-enforcing their
concerns, takes a slightly different view of the route forward. Following
Castells (1996), he argues that "for Birmingham to become plugged into the
global space of flows it needs to establish connections and manipulate
flows".58 A "more radical policy", he suggests,
"would be to establish a series of Birmingham Centres for Cultural
Hybridity in Mumbai, Islamabad, Chicago, Beijing and so on".59 Our
response takes elements of both of these views. The fundamental emphasis on
governance implies a solid rooting in localities, and therefore 'place'.
However, the layered approach to 'locality' does not see 'place' as a rigid,
fixed concept, but as a fluid arrangement of intertwined 'localities' and
'communities'. Thus there is also an emphasis on 'flows' between the layers, in
the form of relationships that, crucially, maintain concern with governance for
all constituents.
From this approach to
'locality', we see the ultimate challenge as moving towards a scenario where
all actors in each locality, and in the communities within and across
localities, participate in the democratic governance of their collective
development. Thus 'prosperity' would become rooted in the inclusion of each
member of each community making up the global economy. This is consistent with
an embracing of the 'global' and 'new' economy that is truly democratic;
concerned with the opportunity and ability for everyone to access and shape the
globalisation process.
'Globalisation' is a
commonly used word. Nearly as commonly, it is a loosely used word. We linked
its conceptualisation to the 'new' economy and suggested a broad definition
based upon a multidisciplinary process, new geography and new technologies.
These three characteristics are the cornerstone of what is fresh about
globalisation at the current time. They are also at the heart of our more
focused conceptualisation, designed to take the analysis forward albeit at the
expense of some consensus. For an analysis of the implications of globalisation
for economic development, knowledge and governance are fundamental. The issue
is not the so-called competitive imperative for knowledge that is so widely
addressed at the current time. Rather, knowledge (and learning) is important
because it is the key to people having the opportunity to engage effectively -
that is, democratically - in the decision-making processes that govern
development. In turn, this enables 'prosperity' to reflect accurately the aims
and objectives of localities. The significance of knowledge is that it be seen
in an active and dynamic sense. What matters is not knowledge of 'facts' but
knowledge in terms of thinking and awareness. Equally important, knowledge is
an ongoing process; participation in governance generates knowledge around
practical issues, allowing localities to establish what is effective for them,
and what is not. This raises the prospect of a virtuous circle, of localities
evolving towards ways in which they can govern themselves to ensure attainment
of their own development aims. If successful, it also implies the possibility
of democratic as against elite globalisation.
Our analysis of specific
territories that play an integral part in a globalised, new economy introduced
the concept of 'locality'. Disagreement in the existing literature about the
role, if any, of 'nations' and 'regions' cannot hide the common view that
globalisation processes are inherently associated with 'regionalisation' of
some form. We suggested an approach that avoids rigid categorisations, focusing
instead on local areas characterised by certain common institutions, practices
and identity, and by the relationships that these foster between actors. We
advocated a 'layered' approach to these localities, accommodating different
communities that exist within and across these layers. This identifies and
structures inter-linked territories from a multidimensional and fluid
perspective. Moreover, implicit in this approach is a central role for
'networking', taking analysis to the significance of the governance of
production networks. We envisage the possibility of certain sorts of
influential networks within and across localities, therefore within and across
nations and regions; these might facilitate decision-making to move localities
towards their own objectives, to achieve what they see as prosperity.
Throughout the paper
concern has focussed on governance, knowledge and networks, three pillars that
are central to democratic processes. Within each of these, there are significant
questions that need to be addressed. With respect to governance, for example,
how do we prevent the hijacking of decision-making by powerful elites, whether
local, national or transnational? Moreover, what of the practical operation of
communication channels and arenas? With respect to knowledge, questions remain
about its very nature, and thus the nature of learning. More particularly, what
are the learning processes that enable people to engage most effectively in
democratic governance? The concept of networks is related to each of these
issues, but specific questions exist, for example, as to the role and
practicalities of multilocational interaction in democratic processes.
In an increasingly complex and connected world, where the traditionally narrow
concerns of politics, economics and other such disciplines are under threat, it
seems natural that embracing these questions will imply a truly
multidisciplinary approach. The question in essence is what form should
dynamic, democratic processes take in a global, new economy. The answer is no
doubt complex, and must account for the direct and indirect welfare effects of
particular processes. Movement towards an answer, we suggest, necessitates a
fusion of politics, geography, anthropology, history, economics, law,
sociology, psychology and a variety of other fields of study.
Nearly 2,500 years ago,
Socrates saw himself as "a citizen, not of Athens or Greece, but of the
world".60 Since that time, the world has shrunk through
technology. However, few people can meaningfully claim that they are citizens
in the sense of participating fully in the governance of their economies and
societies. Today's 'globalised', 'new' economy is characterised by exclusion,
both at the level of the world as a whole, and that of particular territories
and entities within the world. The multidisciplinary challenge is to ensure
democratic globalisation, a situation where all actors in all localities
participate in the democratic governance of their development. Then, each and
every person would be in a position to proclaim: "I am a citizen, not only
of the localities of which I am a part, but also of the world".
* Roger Sugden and James R. Wilson, L'institute (Institute for Industrial
Development Policy), The Birmingham Business School, University of Birmingham,
Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK. We are grateful to Marco Bellandi, J. Robert
Branston, Miriam Quintana Fernandez, Phil Tomlinson, Jonathan Zeitlin and
participants at the L'institute-Milwaukee Workshop on Urban and
Regional Prosperity in a Globalised, New Economy (Milwaukee, July 2001) for
comments and suggestions around earlier material underlying this paper.
1. This follows Sugden and Wilson (2000).
2. Scholte (2000), p. 1.
3. Radice (2000), p. 6.
4. He makes a distinction between 'market', 'direct', and
'communications' globalisation. Other authors, however, make different
distinctions. Scholte (2000), for example, identifies at least five broad
definitions, associated with the concepts of 'internationalisation',
'liberalisation', 'universalisation', 'modernisation', and
'deterritorialisation'.
5. De la Dehesa (2000), p. 17. He also notes that one of the first
to use to the term 'globalisation' was Levitt (1983), who used it to refer to
the globalisation of markets.
6. Robertson (1992), p. 8.
7. Brenner (1999), p. 432.
8. Indeed, Scholte (2001, p. 39) notes that "the only consensus
about globalisation is that it is contested".
9. Hirst and Thompson (1999), p. 2.
10. Scholte (2000), p. 3.
11. Ibid, p. 46, emphasis added. His point is that "although .
territory still matters very much in our globalising world, it no longer
constitutes the whole of our geography" (p. 46).
12. This is clearly a topic where semantics can intrude. For Scholte
(2000), "whereas international relations are interterritorial
relations, global relations are supraterritorial relations.
International relations are cross-border exchanges over distance,
while global relations are transborder exchanges without distance.
Thus global economics is different from international economics, global
politics is different from international politics, and so on. Internationality
is embedded in territorial space; globality transcends that geography" (p.
49).
13. Scholte (2000), p. 53.
14. The Internet has already made it possible, for example, to order goods
from CDs through to cars directly from suppliers in other parts of the world,
creating a market that leaves behind (further than previous forms of
international trade) the necessity of being fixed to a physical locality. On
the Internet as a tool for global linking in academic and academic-related
activities, see Sugden (2000).
15. Gordon (2000), p. 71-72.
16. See, for example, Reich (2001) and Atkinson and Gottlieb (2001).
17. Reich (2001), p. 1.
18. The problems of inequality and de-fragmentation of society that Reich
sees as the opposite side of the 'new economy' coin are also essentially an
enhancement of the problems inherent in Anglo-US capitalism, and identified as
central in the Marxist-influenced dependency literature. Frank (1967, p. 9),
for example, argues that "economic development and underdevelopment are
the opposite faces of the same coin. Both are the necessary result and
contemporary manifestation of internal contradictions in the world capitalist
system".
19. Radice (2000), p. 13.
20. See also Scholte (2000), arguing that "globalisation has not put
the structure of capitalism itself under threat. If anything, the current
situation is one of hypercapitalism" (p. 4). He goes on to argue
"that capitalism has been not only a primary cause, but also a chief
consequence of globalisation" (p. 130).
21. This borrows heavily from Waters (2001), defining globalisation as
"a social process in which the constraints of geography on economic,
political, social and cultural arrangements recede, in which people become
increasingly aware that they are receding and in which people act
accordingly" (p. 5).
22. The 1998/99 "World Development Report" (World Bank, 1998),
for example, is dedicated to knowledge. Moreover, Joseph Stiglitz, former Chief
Economist at the World Bank, has suggested that the World Bank should evolve
towards a 'knowledge bank'. See Stiglitz (1998b), and Standing (2000) for a
critique of his suggestions. The recent concern with knowledge is also mirrored
in other fields, with knowledge creation and knowledge management currently
fashionable topics in the areas of organisational behaviour and management, see
for example Inkpen (1998).
23. Putting these developments in deeper historical perspective, Dunning
(2000, p. 8) argues that "over the last three centuries, the main source
of wealth in market economies has switched from natural assets (notably land
and relatively unskilled labour), through tangible assets (notably buildings,
machinery and equipment, and finance) to intangible created assets (notably
knowledge and information of all kinds)".
24. See, for example, Nichols (2000), Florida (1994).
25. Stiglitz (1998a, p.31), for example, states that "education -
especially education that emphasizes critical, scientific thinking - can also
help train citizens to participate more effectively and more intelligently in
public decisions".
26. See, for example, Cowling and Sugden (1999) and Branston et al
(2001).
27. The importance of corporations in a globalisation context is
recognised by Stallings and Peres (2000, p. 17), who note that globalisation
can be viewed "as a microeconomic phenomenon led by the strategies and
behaviour of corporations."
28. See especially Sugden and Wilson (2000).
29. On the Washington Consensus, see Williamson (1990).
30. Rodrik (1996, p. 9) argues that "faith in the desirability and
efficacy of these policies unites the vast majority of professional economists
in the developed world who are concerned with issues of development".
31. Following Seattle, the annual meetings of the IMF and World Bank in
Prague during November 2000 were targeted by protesters. Likewise, the World
Economic Forum in Davos during December 2000, the European Union summit in
Gothenburg during June 2001, and the G8 Summit in Genoa, July 2001.
32. Joseph Stiglitz has been a particularly key figure in this regard.
See, for example, Stiglitz (1998a, 1998b), Standing (2000).
33. Indeed, Ruigrok and van Tulder (1995, p. 151) suggest that "what
is often referred to as 'globalisation' is perhaps better described as
'Triadisation'. The 1980s internationalisation of trade and investments was
largely limited to the United States, the European Community and Japan as well
as East and South East Asia.other regions on the globe have been excluded from
this supposedly 'global' restructuring process".
34. Fromm (1941), p. 247. He continues: "Hundreds of scattered and
unrelated facts are dumped into the heads of students; their time and energy are
taken up by learning more and more facts so that there is little left for
thinking. To be sure, thinking without a knowledge of facts remains empty and
fictitious; but 'information' alone can be just as much of an obstacle to
thinking as the lack of it".
35. See Branston et al (2001) on citizen-focused or
citizen-determined governance. The relevance of different disciplines to this
approach is highlighted by Escudé's (1997) citizen-centric analysis of foreign
policy.
36. Hirschman (1970), p. 43. Dewey (1916) appears to make a similar point
in his discussion of democracy and education, arguing that "all
communication is like art. It may be fairly said, therefore, that any social
arrangement that remains vitally social, or vitally shared, is educative to
those who participate in it" (p. 7).
37. Ibid., p. 43, emphasis removed.
38. Kindleberger (1969), p. 207.
39. Dewey (1916, p. 7), for example, notes that "not only does social
life demand teaching and learning for its own permanence, but the very process
of living together educates". We suggest that 'living together' need not
be confined to geographical proximity; mental proximity is important in a 'new'
economy and this might be achieved over large distances. On mental proximity,
see Sacchetti and Sugden (2001).
40. Vellinga (2000), p. 7.
41. See Bellandi (2000). Marshall (1919, p. 13-14) writes: "If the
local spirit of any place ran high: if those born in it would rather stay there
than migrate to another place: if most of the capital employed in the
industries of the place were accumulated from those industries, and nearly all
the income enjoyed in it were derived from its own resources: - if all these
conditions were satisfied, then the people of such a place would be a nation
within a nation in a degree sufficient to render propositions, which relate to
international trade, applicable to their case from an abstract point of
view".
42. The analysis also accommodates the possibility of different societies
within and across localities.
43. Atkinson and Gottlieb (2001) argue in the context of the US that the
'new' economy is leading to a decline in the importance of city centres.
However, while these shifts may be an important phenomenon in terms of the
changing of geography cities, it is likely that there will remain centres,
whether 'city centres' or otherwise, that are especially important from an
economic and social perspective.
44. While the diagram is drawn for a city, a similar diagram could be
drawn to represent the relationships between village and town localities in a
rural area.
45. Dewey (1916), p. 5.
46. Thompson (2000), p. 44.
47. See The Independent, 2nd July 2001.
48. Atkinson and Gottlieb (2001) argue, for example, that the 'new'
economy requires new governance, more specifically co-operation and
partnerships across actors and geographical areas.
49. See, for example, Fromm (1941) on the welfare effects of introducing a
democratic process. He argues the danger of market economies leading people to
escape from freedom. A parallel argument can be made about escape from
governance, see Branston et. al. (2001).
50. On 'world cities' see, for example, Friedman and Wolff (1982),
Friedman (1986), Sassen (1991, 1994), Beaverstock et. al. (2000) and
Taylor (2000).
51. Friedman (1986), p. 71, emphasis removed.
52. Sassen (1991), p. 324.
53. For a related analysis in a broader context of development, see Hymer
(1972).
54. Castells (1996), p. 386.
55. Henry and Passmore (1999), p. 61 and p. 62.
56. Ibid., p. 66.
57. Ibid., p. 64.
58. Hubbard (2001), p. 5.
59. Ibid., p. 5.
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Localities and Linkages within a City: Intertwined Layers

** "Localities" might also
exist beyond a city.
Edited and posted on the web on 6th December 2001