Contents:
Acknowledgements
Introduction Michael Keating
1. Stein Rokkan (1980), ‘Territories, Centres, and Peripheries:
Toward a Geoethnic-Geoeconomic-Geopolitical Model of
Differentiation within Western Europe’
2. Derek W. Urwin (1982), ‘Germany: From Geographical Expression to
Regional Accommodation’
3. Celia Applegate (1999), ‘A Europe of Regions: Reflections on the
Historiography of Sub-National Places in Modern Times’
4. Urlan Wannop (1997), ‘Regional Planning and Urban Governance in
Europe and the USA’
5. Thomas O. Hueglin (1986), ‘Regionalism in Western Europe:
Conceptual Problems of a New Political Perspective’
6. Anssi Paasi (2002), ‘Place and Region: Regional Worlds and
Words’
7. Derek W. Urwin (1998), ‘Modern Democratic Experiences of
Territorial Management: Single Houses, But Many Mansions’
8. Kenichi Ohmae (1993), ‘The Rise of the Region State’
9. Michael Storper (1995), ‘The Resurgence of Regional Economies,
Ten Years Later: The Region as a Nexus of Untraded
Interdependencies’
10. Allen J. Scott (1996), ‘Regional Motors of the Global
Economy'
11. Ash Amin (1999), 'An Institutionalist Perspective on Regional
Economic Development’
12. John Lovering (1999), ‘Theory Led by Policy: The Inadequacies
of the “New Regionalism” (Illustrated from the Case of Wales)’
13. Ray Hudson (1999), ‘“The Learning Economy, the Learning Firm
and the Learning Region”: A Sympathetic Critique of the Limits to
Learning’
14. John Agnew (1997), ‘The Dramaturgy of Horizons: Geographical
Scale in the “Reconstruction of Italy” by the New Italian Political
Parties, 1992–95’
15. Benito Giordano (2000), ‘Italian Regionalism or “Padanian”
Nationalism - the Political Project of the Lega Nord in Italian
Politics’
16. Mick Dunford (1994), ‘Winners and Losers: The New Map of
Economic Inequality in the European Union’
17. Ash Amin and John Tomaney (1995), ‘The Regional Dilemma in a
Neo-Liberal Europe’
18. Charlie Jeffery (2000), ‘Sub-National Mobilization and European
Integration: Does It Make Any Difference?’
19. Liesbet Hooghe and Michael Keating (1994), ‘The Politics of
European Union Regional Policy’
20. Brian Hocking (1999), ‘Patrolling the “Frontier”:
Globalization, Localization and the “Actorness” of Non-Central
Governments’
21. James Wesley Scott (1999), ‘European and North American
Contexts for Cross-border Regionalism’
22. L.J. Sharpe (1993), ‘The European Meso: An Appraisal'
23. Michael Keating (1998), 'Is there a Regional Level of
Government in Europe?’
24. Carlo Trigilia (1991), ‘The Paradox of the Region: Economic
Regulation and the Representation of Interests’
25. Martin Brusis (2002), ‘Between EU Requirements, Competitive
Politics, and National Traditions: Re-creating Regions in the
Accession Countries of Central and Eastern Europe’
26. Arthur Benz and Dietrich Fürst (2002), ‘Policy Learning in
Regional Networks’
27. John Loughlin (2000), ‘Regional Autonomy and State Paradigm
Shifts in Western Europe’
Name Index
Edited by Michael Keating, Professor, University of Aberdeen, UK
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