Results 211 to 220 of about 8,275 (280)
The City as an Anti‐Growth Machine
ABSTRACT Logan and Molotch's “urban growth machine” remains foundational in urban theory, describing how coalitions of landowners, developers, and politicians promote urban growth to raise land values. This paper argues that under financialized capitalism, the dynamics have inverted: asset appreciation now outweighs productive investment, and urban ...
Petter Törnberg
wiley +1 more source
URBAN POPULATION AND AMENITIES: THE NEOCLASSICAL MODEL OF LOCATION
David Albouy, Bryan A. Stuart
openalex +2 more sources
David Marsden's Comparative and Theoretical Craft: Signposts to a Better World of Work
ABSTRACT David Marsden enriched and extended the field of employment relations with his interdisciplinary and comparative practice. This introduction to the special issue honouring his work examines the nature of David's contribution and analyses his influence on employment relations and adjacent fields.
Sarah Ashwin +2 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT This study focuses on two key objectives: first, to evaluate the unconditional effect of foreign direct investment (FDI) on economic resilience in Africa and, second, to investigate the relevance of economic complexity in shaping the FDI–economic resilience nexus. The analysis is based on a panel of 34 African countries covering the years 2011–
Ekene ThankGod Emeka +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Unpacking Endogeneity: Growth, Discontent and Cohesion Policy in the EU Regions
ABSTRACT This paper explores the complex interplay between regional economic growth, political discontent, and policy responsiveness within EU regions, focusing on increasing inequalities in the context of the EU's ongoing processes of deepening and widening integration. Drawing on panel data for the EU28 at the regional level (NUTS2) from 2010 to 2018,
George Petrakos +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Technological Change and the Roaring Twenties: A Neoclassical Perspective [PDF]
Sharon G. Harrison, Mark Weder
openalex
Abstract Scholars who have examined European integration from a neo‐Polanyian perspective have long been sceptical about the opportunities for a ‘countermovement’ against the EU's market‐making bias. However, as part of a broader ‘social turn’, recent years have seen the adoption of EU legislation to promote fair and decent working conditions. Based on
Sven Schreurs
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT At the center of this study is a key event in the formation of the modern Hungarian literary field: the series of debates known as the Lexicon Trial (1830–1831), which played a decisive role in the institutionalization and autonomization of literature during Hungary's Reform Era (1825–1848).
Ádám Havas
wiley +1 more source

