Description

Book Synopsis
The book investigates the impact on the competitiveness of cities developing creative industries (arts, media, entertainment, creative business services, architects, publishers, designers) and knowledge-intensive industries (ICT, R&D, finance, law).

Trade Review
"Making Competitive Cities is therefore a stimulating read, persuasive and provocative in its lines of argument, and presenting an important challenge to urban political praxis the world over." (Journal of Economic Geography, 19 August 2011)

"The strength of Making Competitive Cities is its highly structured, data-driven research on thirteen diverse and widely scattered cities, which facilitates comparative study and the construction of useful generalizations. The informative individual chapters follow parallel structures and are all well prepared." (Association of American Geographers, 14 March 2011)

"This collection of essays utilizes comparative case studies to illustrate the challenges cities face from a shifting global economy and the very different ways cities can change. The essays offer insights into the theoretical and practical understanding of the environments required to develop competitive "creative knowledge" cities, cities that are successful, exciting, and enjoyable places to live." (Book News Inc, November 2010)



Table of Contents
Foreword by Professor Susan Fainstein, Harvard University

Preface

Contributors

PART I INTRODUCTION

1 Making Competitive Cities: Debates and Challenges

Sako Musterd and Alan Murie

Debates and challenges

Sectors

Questions and theories

Regions and sources

Pathways, actors and policies

References

2 The Idea of the Creative or Knowledge-Based City

Sako Musterd and Alan Murie

Essential conditions for competitive cities

‘Hard’ conditions theory

Cluster theory

Personal networks

‘Soft’ conditions theory

Three parts

References

PART II PATHWAYS

3 Pathways in Europe

Denis Eckert, Alan Murie and Sako Musterd

Path dependency

Initial expectations and comparisons

The chapters to come

References

4 Stable Trajectories Towards the Creative Knowledge City?

Amsterdam, Munich and Milan

Anne von Streit, Marco Bontje and Elena dell’Agnese

Introduction

The economic base and the creative knowledge economy

Development path: roots and current conditions of the

creative knowledge economy

Development paths: a synthesis and conclusion

References

5 Reinventing the City: Barcelona, Birmingham and Dublin

Veronica Crossa, Montserrat Pareja-Eastaway and

Austin Barber

Introduction

Historical context

The trajectory of industrial development

The state and policy intervention

The challenge of soft factors

Conclusions

References

6 Institutional Change and New Development Paths:

Budapest, Leipzig, Poznan, Riga and Sofia

Tadeusz Stryjakiewicz, Joachim Burdack and

Tamás Egedy

Introduction

Socio-economic characteristics of the study areas

Development pathways shaping the city profiles and the role of the systemic change

Determinants of development of the creative knowledge sector

Conclusions

Acknowledgements

References

7 Changing Specialisations and Single Sector Dominance:

Helsinki and Toulouse

Hélène Martin-Brelot and Kaisa Kepsu

Introduction

Setting the context – Helsinki and Toulouse

Pathways to knowledge-driven economies

Knowledge driving economic development: sciences, industries and policies

Future challenges

Conclusion and discussion

References

PART III ACTORS

8 What Works for Managers and Highly Educated Workers

in Creative Knowledge Industries?

Sako Musterd and Alan Murie

Introduction

Three groups of actors and a range of conditions

The following chapters

References

9 Managers and Entrepreneurs in Creative and Knowledge-

Intensive Industries: What Determines Their Location?

Toulouse, Helsinki, Budapest, Riga and Sofia

Evgenii Dainov and Arnis Sauka

Introduction: places matter

Cities and the creative class: major conceptual challenges

Characteristics of the cities: a brief overview

Location decisions: ‘individual trajectory’ considerations and ‘hard’ factors

Location decisions: the role of ‘soft’ factors

In-city location decisions

Capital city versus provincial city location decisions

Policymaking: ‘soft’, ‘hard’ or ‘other’?

Conclusions and implications

Acknowledgement

References

10 Transnational Migrants in the Creative Knowledge Industries:

Amsterdam, Barcelona, Dublin and Munich

Heike Pethe, Sabine Hafner and Philip Lawton

Introduction

Conceptualising transnational migrants and the

creative class

Places and potentials

The attractiveness of European metropolitan regions

Conclusion

Acknowledgments

References

11 Attracting Young and High-Skilled Workers: Amsterdam,

Milan and Barcelona

Montserrat Pareja-Eastaway, Marco Bontje and

Marianne d’Ovidio

Introduction

Competing for young, highly skilled workers

Young and highly-skilled workers in European cities

The Amsterdam, Barcelona and Milan city-regions

Conclusions

References

12 Working on the Edge? Creative Jobs in Birmingham,

Leipzig and Poznan

Julie Brown, Robert Nadler and Michal Meczynski

Introduction: creative work – precariousness, uncertainty

and risk?

Methodology

Insecure, casualised or long-term, sustainable employment?

Discussion

Conclusions

References

PART IV POLICIES

13 What Policies Should Cities Adopt?

Alan Murie and Sako Musterd

Introduction

What should cities do?

European cities

Which policy agendas?

Networking policy

The following chapters

References

14 Strategic Economic Policy: Milan, Dublin and Toulouse

Silvia Mugnano, Enda Murphy and Hélène Martin-Brelot

Introduction

Distinctive policy traditions

Existing strengths in creative knowledge policy

New strategic economic policy approaches

Key actors in entrepreneurial cities

Addressing barriers and obstacles

Conclusion and new challenges

References

15 Beyond Cluster Policy? Birmingham, Poznan and Helsinki

Caroline Chapain, Krzysztof Stachowiak and

Mari Vaattovaarra

Introduction

The cluster policy paradigm

The state of the creative and knowledge economy

Supporting the creative and knowledge economy: three approaches

Conclusions

Acknowledgments

References

16 Policies for Firms or Policies for Individuals? Amsterdam, Munich and Budapest

Zoltán Kovács, Heike Pethe and Manfred Miosga

Introduction

Do policies help in competition? – a theoretical framework

Economic development and political conditions

The creative and knowledge sector and policies enhancing its development

Conclusions

References

17 New Governance, New Geographic Scales,

New Institutional Settings

Bastian Lange, Marc Pradel i Miquel and Vassil Garnizov

Introduction

Conceptual prerequisites: understanding governance in creative and knowledge industries

New governance dimensions

Professionalisation – self-regulation and self-governance of new professions

Towards new geographical scales?

Governance approaches in Barcelona, Leipzig and Sofia

Knowledge-intensive industries in regard to governance perspectives

Conclusions

Acknowledgements

References

PART V SYNTHESIS

18 Synthesis: Re-making the Competitive City

Sako Musterd and Alan Murie

Introduction

A city is not a T-shirt

Multi-layered cities: the importance of pathways

Personal actor networks: key conditions

New governance approaches

Conclusion

References

Index

Making Competitive Cities

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      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 04/06/2010
      ISBN13: 9781405194150, 978-1405194150
      ISBN10: 1405194154

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The book investigates the impact on the competitiveness of cities developing creative industries (arts, media, entertainment, creative business services, architects, publishers, designers) and knowledge-intensive industries (ICT, R&D, finance, law).

      Trade Review
      "Making Competitive Cities is therefore a stimulating read, persuasive and provocative in its lines of argument, and presenting an important challenge to urban political praxis the world over." (Journal of Economic Geography, 19 August 2011)

      "The strength of Making Competitive Cities is its highly structured, data-driven research on thirteen diverse and widely scattered cities, which facilitates comparative study and the construction of useful generalizations. The informative individual chapters follow parallel structures and are all well prepared." (Association of American Geographers, 14 March 2011)

      "This collection of essays utilizes comparative case studies to illustrate the challenges cities face from a shifting global economy and the very different ways cities can change. The essays offer insights into the theoretical and practical understanding of the environments required to develop competitive "creative knowledge" cities, cities that are successful, exciting, and enjoyable places to live." (Book News Inc, November 2010)



      Table of Contents
      Foreword by Professor Susan Fainstein, Harvard University

      Preface

      Contributors

      PART I INTRODUCTION

      1 Making Competitive Cities: Debates and Challenges

      Sako Musterd and Alan Murie

      Debates and challenges

      Sectors

      Questions and theories

      Regions and sources

      Pathways, actors and policies

      References

      2 The Idea of the Creative or Knowledge-Based City

      Sako Musterd and Alan Murie

      Essential conditions for competitive cities

      ‘Hard’ conditions theory

      Cluster theory

      Personal networks

      ‘Soft’ conditions theory

      Three parts

      References

      PART II PATHWAYS

      3 Pathways in Europe

      Denis Eckert, Alan Murie and Sako Musterd

      Path dependency

      Initial expectations and comparisons

      The chapters to come

      References

      4 Stable Trajectories Towards the Creative Knowledge City?

      Amsterdam, Munich and Milan

      Anne von Streit, Marco Bontje and Elena dell’Agnese

      Introduction

      The economic base and the creative knowledge economy

      Development path: roots and current conditions of the

      creative knowledge economy

      Development paths: a synthesis and conclusion

      References

      5 Reinventing the City: Barcelona, Birmingham and Dublin

      Veronica Crossa, Montserrat Pareja-Eastaway and

      Austin Barber

      Introduction

      Historical context

      The trajectory of industrial development

      The state and policy intervention

      The challenge of soft factors

      Conclusions

      References

      6 Institutional Change and New Development Paths:

      Budapest, Leipzig, Poznan, Riga and Sofia

      Tadeusz Stryjakiewicz, Joachim Burdack and

      Tamás Egedy

      Introduction

      Socio-economic characteristics of the study areas

      Development pathways shaping the city profiles and the role of the systemic change

      Determinants of development of the creative knowledge sector

      Conclusions

      Acknowledgements

      References

      7 Changing Specialisations and Single Sector Dominance:

      Helsinki and Toulouse

      Hélène Martin-Brelot and Kaisa Kepsu

      Introduction

      Setting the context – Helsinki and Toulouse

      Pathways to knowledge-driven economies

      Knowledge driving economic development: sciences, industries and policies

      Future challenges

      Conclusion and discussion

      References

      PART III ACTORS

      8 What Works for Managers and Highly Educated Workers

      in Creative Knowledge Industries?

      Sako Musterd and Alan Murie

      Introduction

      Three groups of actors and a range of conditions

      The following chapters

      References

      9 Managers and Entrepreneurs in Creative and Knowledge-

      Intensive Industries: What Determines Their Location?

      Toulouse, Helsinki, Budapest, Riga and Sofia

      Evgenii Dainov and Arnis Sauka

      Introduction: places matter

      Cities and the creative class: major conceptual challenges

      Characteristics of the cities: a brief overview

      Location decisions: ‘individual trajectory’ considerations and ‘hard’ factors

      Location decisions: the role of ‘soft’ factors

      In-city location decisions

      Capital city versus provincial city location decisions

      Policymaking: ‘soft’, ‘hard’ or ‘other’?

      Conclusions and implications

      Acknowledgement

      References

      10 Transnational Migrants in the Creative Knowledge Industries:

      Amsterdam, Barcelona, Dublin and Munich

      Heike Pethe, Sabine Hafner and Philip Lawton

      Introduction

      Conceptualising transnational migrants and the

      creative class

      Places and potentials

      The attractiveness of European metropolitan regions

      Conclusion

      Acknowledgments

      References

      11 Attracting Young and High-Skilled Workers: Amsterdam,

      Milan and Barcelona

      Montserrat Pareja-Eastaway, Marco Bontje and

      Marianne d’Ovidio

      Introduction

      Competing for young, highly skilled workers

      Young and highly-skilled workers in European cities

      The Amsterdam, Barcelona and Milan city-regions

      Conclusions

      References

      12 Working on the Edge? Creative Jobs in Birmingham,

      Leipzig and Poznan

      Julie Brown, Robert Nadler and Michal Meczynski

      Introduction: creative work – precariousness, uncertainty

      and risk?

      Methodology

      Insecure, casualised or long-term, sustainable employment?

      Discussion

      Conclusions

      References

      PART IV POLICIES

      13 What Policies Should Cities Adopt?

      Alan Murie and Sako Musterd

      Introduction

      What should cities do?

      European cities

      Which policy agendas?

      Networking policy

      The following chapters

      References

      14 Strategic Economic Policy: Milan, Dublin and Toulouse

      Silvia Mugnano, Enda Murphy and Hélène Martin-Brelot

      Introduction

      Distinctive policy traditions

      Existing strengths in creative knowledge policy

      New strategic economic policy approaches

      Key actors in entrepreneurial cities

      Addressing barriers and obstacles

      Conclusion and new challenges

      References

      15 Beyond Cluster Policy? Birmingham, Poznan and Helsinki

      Caroline Chapain, Krzysztof Stachowiak and

      Mari Vaattovaarra

      Introduction

      The cluster policy paradigm

      The state of the creative and knowledge economy

      Supporting the creative and knowledge economy: three approaches

      Conclusions

      Acknowledgments

      References

      16 Policies for Firms or Policies for Individuals? Amsterdam, Munich and Budapest

      Zoltán Kovács, Heike Pethe and Manfred Miosga

      Introduction

      Do policies help in competition? – a theoretical framework

      Economic development and political conditions

      The creative and knowledge sector and policies enhancing its development

      Conclusions

      References

      17 New Governance, New Geographic Scales,

      New Institutional Settings

      Bastian Lange, Marc Pradel i Miquel and Vassil Garnizov

      Introduction

      Conceptual prerequisites: understanding governance in creative and knowledge industries

      New governance dimensions

      Professionalisation – self-regulation and self-governance of new professions

      Towards new geographical scales?

      Governance approaches in Barcelona, Leipzig and Sofia

      Knowledge-intensive industries in regard to governance perspectives

      Conclusions

      Acknowledgements

      References

      PART V SYNTHESIS

      18 Synthesis: Re-making the Competitive City

      Sako Musterd and Alan Murie

      Introduction

      A city is not a T-shirt

      Multi-layered cities: the importance of pathways

      Personal actor networks: key conditions

      New governance approaches

      Conclusion

      References

      Index

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