Amin, A., editor, 1994: Post-Fordism. A reader. Oxford: Blackwell.
2.
Anderson, M.1995: The role of collaborative integration in industrial organization: observations from the Canadian aerospace industry. Economic Geography71, 55-78.
3.
Angel, D.P.1991: High-technology agglomeration and the labour market: the case of Silicon Valley. Environment and Planning A23, 1501-16.
4.
Angel, D.P. and Engstrom, J.1995: Manufacturing systems and technological change: the US personal computer industry. Economic Geography71, 79-102.
5.
Appold, S.J.1995: Agglomeration, interorganizational networks, and competitive performance in the US metalworking sector. Economic Geography71, 27-54.
6.
Archibugi, D. and Michie, J.1995: Technology and innovation: an introduction. Cambridge Journal of Economics19, 1-4.
7.
Arthur, W.B.1986: Industry location patterns and the importance of history. Publication 84. Stanford, CA: Center for Economic Policy Research, Stanford University.
8.
— 1990: Positive feedbacks in the economy. Scientific American February, 80-85.
9.
Asheim, B.T.1994: Industrial districts, inter-firm co-operation and endogenous technological development: the experience of developed countries . In Technological dynamism in industrial districts: an alternative approach to industrialization in developing countries? New York and Geneva : UNCTAD, United Nations.
10.
Aydalot, P.1986: Milieux innovateurs en Europe. Paris : GREMI.
11.
Chinitz, B.1961: Contrasts in agglomeration: New York and Pittsburgh . American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings51, 279-89.
12.
Clark, G.L.1993: Global interdependence and regional development: business linkages and corporate governance in a world of financial risk. Transactions, Institute of British Geographers NS18, 309-25.
13.
Coriat, B. and Bianchi, R.1995: Swatch: a European response to the Japanese challenge . In Andreasen, L.E., Coriat, B., den Hertog, F. and Kaplinsky, R., editors, Europe's next stop: organizational innovation, competition and employment , London: Frank Cass.
14.
Cornish, S.L.1995: 'Marketing matters': the function of markets in the growth of firms and industries. Progress in Human Geography19, 317-37.
15.
Courlet, C. and Soulage, B.1995: Industrial dynamics and territorial space. Entrepreneurship and Regional Development7, 287-307.
16.
Crewe, L. and Forster, Z.1993: Markets, design, and local agglomeration: the role of the small independent retailer in the workings of the fashion system. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space11, 213-29.
17.
Dahmén, E.1988: 'Development blocks' in industrial economics. Scandinavian Economic History ReviewXXXVI, 3-14.
18.
David, P. and Rosenbloom, J.L.1990: Marshallian factor market externalities and the dynamics of industrial localization. Journal of Urban Economics28, 349-70.
19.
Dicken, P.1992: Global shift. The internationalization of economic activity (2nd edn.). London : Paul Chapman.
20.
Dicken, P., Forsgren, M. and Malmberg, A.1994: The local embeddedness of transnational corporations . In Amin, A. and Thrift, N., editors, Globalization, institutions and regional development in Europe, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
21.
Dicken, P. and Lloyd, P.E.1990: Location in space: theoretical perspectives in economic geography (3rd edn). New York : Harper & Row.
22.
Dunning, J.H. 1994: Globalization, technological change and the spatial organization of economic activity. Paper presented at the Prince Bertil symposium on 'The dynamic firm: the role of regions, technology, strategy and organization', Stockholm, Sweden, 12-15 June.
23.
The Economist1994: Does it matter where you are? 30 July, 11-12.
24.
Ekinsmyth, C., Hallsworth, A., Leonard, S. and Taylor, M.1995: Stability and instability: the uncertainty of economic geography. Area27, 289-99.
25.
Enright, M.J.1993: The determinants of geographic concentration in industry. Working Paper 93-052. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Business School.
26.
— 1994: Regional clusters and firm strategy. Paper presented at the Prince Bertil symposium on 'The dynamic firm: the role of regions, technology, strategy and organization', Stockholm , Sweden, 12-15 June.
27.
Fagerberg, J.1995: User-producer interaction, learning and comparative advantage . Cambridge Journal of Economics19, 243-56.
28.
Feldman, M.P.1994: The geography of innovation. Dordrecht : Kluwer Academic.
29.
Feldman, M.P. and Florida, R.1994: The geographic sources of innovation: technological infrastructure and product innovation in the United States. Annals of the Association of American Geographers84, 210-29.
30.
Freeman, C.1995: The 'national system of innovation' in historical perspective . Cambridge Journal of Economics19, 5-24.
31.
Gertler, M.S.1995: 'Being there': proximity, organization and culture in the development and adoption of advanced manufacturing technologies. Economic Geography71, 1-26.
32.
Glasmeier, A.1990: The role of merchant wholesalers in industrial agglomeration formation. Annals of the Association of American Geographers80, 394-417.
33.
— 1994: Flexible districts, flexible regions? The institutional and cultural limits to districts in an era of globalization and technological paradigm shifts. In Amin, A. and Thrift, N., editors, Globalization, institutions, and regional development in Europe, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
34.
Grabher, G., editor, 1993: The embedded firm: on the socioeconomics of industrial networks. London: Routledge.
Head, K., Ries, J. and Swenson, D.1995: Agglomeration benefits and location choice: evidence from Japanese manufacturing investments in the United States. Journal of International Economics38, 223-47.
37.
Hirschman, A.O.1958: The strategy of economy development. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
38.
Hoover, E.M.1948: The location of economic activity. New York: McGraw-Hill.
39.
Isaksen, A.1996: Towards increased regional specialization? The quantitative importance of new industrial spaces in Norway, 1970-1990. Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift50 (in press).
40.
Krugman, P.1991a: Geography and trade. Cambridge, MA : MIT Press.
41.
— 1991b: Increasing returns and economic geography. Journal of Political Economy99, 483-99.
42.
— 1991c: History and industry location: the case of the manufacturing belt. The American Economic Review81, 80-83.
43.
— 1995: Development, geography, and economic theory. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
44.
Lundvall, B.-Å., editor, 1992: National systems of innovation: towards a theory of innovation and interactive learning. London: Pinter.
45.
MacCormack, A.D., Lawrence, N.J. and Rosenfield, D.B.1994: The dynamics of global manufacturing site location. Sloan Management Review35, 69-80.
46.
Maillat, D.1995: Territorial dynamic, innovative milieus and regional policy . Entrepreneurship and Regional Development7, 157-65.
47.
Malecki, E.J.1995: Guest editorial: flexibility and industrial districts . Environment and Planning A27, 11-14.
48.
Malmberg, A., Sölvell, Ö. and Zander, I.1996: Spatial clustering, local accumulation of knowledge and firm competitiveness. Geografiska Annaler Series B 78B (in press).
49.
Marshall, A.1916 (1890): Principles of economics. An introductory volume (7th edn). London: Macmillan.
50.
Martin, R. and Sunley, P.1995: Paul Krugman's geographical economics and its implications for regional development theory: a critical assessment. Paper presented at the annual conference of the IBG, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, January.
51.
Maskell, P. and Malmberg, A.1995: Localized learning and industrial competitiveness. Working Paper 80. Berkeley, CA: Berkeley Roundtable on the International Economy (BRIE).
52.
McCann, P.1995: Rethinking the economics of location and agglomeration . Urban Studies32, 563-77.
53.
Morgan, K.1995: Institutions, innovation and regional renewal. The development agency as animateur. Paper presented at the Regional Studies conference on 'Regional futures', Göteborg, Sweden , 6-9 May.
54.
Murdoch, J.1995: Actor-networks and the evolution of economic forms: combining description and explanation in theories of regulation, flexible specialization, and networks. Environment and Planning A 27, 731-57.
55.
Myrdal, G.1957: Economic theory and underdeveloped regions. London: Duckworth.
56.
Nelson, E.R.1993: National innovation systems: a comparative analysis . Oxford: Oxford University Press .
57.
Norcliffe, G. and Zweerman Bartschat, T.1994: Locational avoidance by nonmetropolitan industry. Environment and Planning A 26, 1123-45.
58.
Norton, R.D.1992: Agglomeration and competitiveness: from Marshall to Chinitz. UrbanStudies29, 155-170.
59.
Park, S.O. and Markusen, A.1995: Generalizing new industrial districts: a theoretical agenda and an application from a non-western economy. Environment and Planning A 27, 81-104.
60.
Patel, P.1995: Localized production of technology for global markets . Cambridge Journal of Economics19, 141-53.
61.
Phelps, N.A.1992: External economies, agglomeration and flexible accumulation . Transactions, Institute of British Geographers NS17, 35-46.
62.
Piore, M. and Sabel, C.1984: The second industrial divide. New York : Basic Books.
63.
Porter, M.E.1990: The competitive advantage of nations. London and Basingstoke : Macmillan.
64.
— 1994: The role of location in competition. Journal of the Economics of Business1, 35-39.
65.
Pred, A.1977: City systems in advanced economies. Past growth, present processes and future development options. London : Hutchinson.
66.
Putnam, R.D. with Leonardi, R. and Nanetti, R.Y.1993: Making democracy work - civic traditions in modern Italy . Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
67.
Reid, N.1995: Just-in-time inventory control and the economic integration of Japanese-owned manufacturing plants with the county, state and national economies of the United States. Regional Studies29, 345-55.
68.
Sadler, D.1994: The geographies of just-in-time: Japanese investment in the automotive components industry in western Europe. Economic Geography70, 41-59.
69.
Saxenian, A.1994: Regional advantage. Culture and competition in Silicon Valley and Route 128. Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press.
70.
Scott, A.J.1983: Industrial organization and the logic of intra-metropolitan location. 1. Theoretical considerations. Economic Geography59, 233-50.
71.
— 1988: New industrial spaces: flexible production organisation and regional development in North America and western Europe. London: Pion.
72.
— 1995: The geographic foundations of industrial performance. Competition & Change. The Journal of Global Business and Industrial Performance1,51-66.
73.
Scott, A.J. and Storper, M.1992: Regional development reconsidered. In Ernste, H. and Meier, V. , editors, Regional development and contemporary industrial response. Extending flexible specialisation, London: Belhaven Press.
74.
Smith, D.F. and Florida, R.1994: Agglomeration and industrial location: an econometric analysis of Japanese-affiliated manufacturing establishments in auto-related industries. Journal of Urban Economics36, 23-41.
75.
Storper, M.1995: The resurgence of regional economies, ten years later: the region as a nexus of untraded interdependencies. European Urban and Regional Studies2, 191-221.
76.
Toledano, J.1978: A propos des filières industrielles. Revue d'Economique Industrielle6, 149-58.
77.
Ullman, E.L.1958: Regional development and the geography of concentration . Papers and Proceedings of the Regional Science Association IV, 179-98.
78.
Venables, A.J.1994: Economic integration and industrial agglomeration . The Economic and Social Review26, 1-17.
79.
Weber, A.1929 (1909): Theory of the location of industries . Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
80.
Whitley, R., editor, 1995: European business systems. Firms and markets in their national contexts. London: Sage.