articleJournal of Economic GeographyDec 16, 2003Closed access

The exaggerated death of geography: learning, proximity and territorial innovation systems

Cardiff University

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Globalization and digitalization have been presented as ineluctable forces which signal the ‘death of geography’. The paper takes issue with this fashionable narrative. The argument that ‘geography matters’ is pursued in three ways: first, by questioning the ‘distance-destroying’ capacity of information and communication technologies where social depth is conflated with spatial reach; second, by arguing that physical proximity may be essential for some forms of knowledge exchange; and third, by charting the growth of territorial innovation systems.

Citation impact

804
total citations
FWCI
75.45
Percentile
100%
References
66
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Conflation
  • Economic geography
  • Argument (complex analysis)
  • Narrative
  • Globalization
  • Sociology
  • Epistemology
  • Geography
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