Flexible specialisation, industrial districts, regional economies: strategies for socialists?

1989 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 527-545 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grahame Thompson
Author(s):  
Stuart Holland ◽  
Teresa Carla Oliveira

Who does what, and how, is central to Human Resource Management (HRM). Where people do it has been central to theories of location and the clustering of firms in industrial districts. Yet there has been little synergy boundary spanning between HRM and location theories. This chapter seeks to redress this in relation to the rise and decline of industrial districts of small and medium firms and to draw implications for their potential regeneration. It relates this to cost-based models of locational and competitive advantage, theories of flexible specialisation, the “triple helix” concept of enterprise-university-government relations, and the challenges both for entrepreneurs and for policy makers in an era in which industrial districts are no longer only local but already have “gone global.” In forwarding the concept of “enhanced HRM,” the chapter advocates that public policies for SMEs should encourage surfacing tacit knowledge in new product innovation, achieving kaizen style continuous improvement, stretching core competences, profiling and extending latent abilities and implicit skills, and boundary spanning to synergise research with new high-tech start ups. While critical both of Michael Porter’s dismissal of tacit knowledge and kaizen, and of European research and regional policies, the chapter gives examples of success in such policies and how “enhanced HRM” can draw from them to regenerate industrial districts.


Author(s):  
Jeffrey Herbst

This chapter examines the politics of the currency in West Africa from the beginning of the twentieth century. A public series of debates over the nature of the currency occurred in West Africa during both the colonial and independence periods. Since 1983, West African countries have been pioneers in Africa in developing new strategies to combat overvaluation of the currency and reduce the control of government over the currency supply. The chapter charts the evolution of West African currencies as boundaries and explores their relationship to state consolidation. It shows that leaders in African capitals managed to make the units they ruled increasingly distinct from the international and regional economies, but the greater salience of the currency did not end up promoting state consolidation. Rather, winning the ability to determine the value of the currency led to a series of disastrous decisions that severely weakened the states themselves.


2017 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 26-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Y. Veselovsky

In article primary benefits of innovative territorial clusters, and also domestic and foreign experience of their creation and formation are described. Initiatives of the state of increase in efficiency of activities of innovative clusters, the main shortcomings of their operation are selected, measures which implementation, will allow to become innovative clusters drivers of economic development of regional economies are proposed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 71-76
Author(s):  
A. E. Suglobov ◽  
В. Т. Tolebayeva ◽  
M. Zh. Kukeyeva

The article considers the directions of ensuring economic security of the regions, indicators of its measurement, recommendations for the strengthening of the protection of regional economies.


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