• Geographical Research
  • Vol. 39, Issue 6, 1343 (2020)
Guojun YU1、1, Canfei HE1、1、2、2、*, and Shengjun ZHU1、1
Author Affiliations
  • 1College of Urban and Environmental Sciences, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China
  • 1北京大学城市与环境学院,北京100871
  • 2Peking University-Lincoln Institute Center for Urban Development and Land Policy, Beijing 100871, China
  • 2北京大学-林肯研究院城市发展与土地政策研究中心,北京100871
  • show less
    DOI: 10.11821/dlyj020190560 Cite this Article
    Guojun YU, Canfei HE, Shengjun ZHU. Industrial cluster resilience: Technological innovation, relational governance, and market diversification[J]. Geographical Research, 2020, 39(6): 1343 Copy Citation Text show less
    References

    [1] Martin R. Regional economic resilience, hysteresis and recessionary shocks[J]. Journal of Economic Geography, 12, 1-32(2012).

    [3] Boschma R. Towards an evolutionary perspective on regional resilience[J]. Regional Studies, 49, 733-751(2015).

    [4] Liang J. Trade shocks, new industry entry and industry relatedness[J]. Regional Studies, 51, 1749-1760(2017).

    [5] Kitsos A, Bishop P. Economic resilience in Great Britain: The crisis impact and its determining factors for local authority districts[J]. Annals of Regional Science, 60, 329-347(2018).

    [6] Bourdin S. Geography of the resilience of European regions facing the crisis[J]. Région et Développment, 53-70(2018).

    [7] Terhorst P, Erkuş-öztürk H. Resilience to the global economic and Turkish (geo)political crisis compared[J]. Tijdschrift Voor Economische En Sociale Geografie, 110, 138-155(2019).

    [8] Webber D, Healy A, Bristow G. Regional growth paths and resilience: A European analysis[J]. Economic Geography, 94, 355-375(2018).

    [9] Pendall R, Foster K, Cowell M. Resilience and regions: Building understanding of the metaphor[J]. University of California, Berkeley, Institute of Urban and Regional Development (IURD) Working Paper 2007-12(2007). https://iurd.berkeley.edu/wp/2007-12.pdf, 2007-12-31

    [10] Vanthillo T, Cant J, Vanelslander T et al. Understanding evolution in the Antwerp chemical cluster: The role of regional development strategies[J]. European Planning Studies, 26, 1519-1536(2018).

    [11] Baglieri D, Cinici M, Mangematin V. Rejuvenating clusters with 'sleeping anchors': The case of nanoclusters[J]. Technovation, 32, 245-256(2012).

    [12] Mudambi R, Mudambi S, Mukherjee D et al. Global connectivity and the evolution of industrial clusters: From tires to polymers in Northeast Ohio[J]. Industrial Marketing Management, 61, 20-29(2017).

    [13] Lin H, Hu T. Knowledge interaction and spatial dynamics in industrial districts[J]. Sustainability, 9, 1-18(2017).

    [15] Treado C. Pittsburgh's evolving steel legacy and the steel technology cluster[J]. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 3, 105-120(2010).

    [16] Gray M, Golob E, Markusen A. Big firms, long arms, wide shoulders: The 'hub-and-spoke' industrial district in the Seattle region[J]. Regional Studies, 30, 651-666(1996).

    [17] Cruz S, Teixeira A. The evolution of the cluster literature: Shedding light on the regional studies-regional science debate[J]. Regional Studies, 44, 1263-1288(2010).

    [18] Chaminade C, Bellandi M, Plechero M et al. Understanding processes of path renewal and creation in thick specialized regional innovation systems. Evidence from two textile districts in Italy and Sweden[J]. European Planning Studies, 27, 1978-1994(2019).

    [20] Martin R, Sunley P. Conceptualizing cluster evolution: Beyond the life cycle mode?[J]. Regional Studies, 45, 1299-1318(2011).

    [21] Markusen A. Profit Cycles, Oligopoly, and Regional Development, 27-37(1985).

    [22] Klepper S. Industry life cycles[J]. Industrial and Corporate Change, 6, 145-181(1997).

    [23] Porter M. Clusters and the new economics of competition[J]. Harvard Business Review, 76, 77-90(1998).

    [25] Storper M, Walker R. The Capitalist Imperative[J]. New York: Basil Blackwell, 1-30(1989).

    [26] Harvey D. A Companion to Marx's Capital[J]. London and New York: Verso, 1-53(2010).

    [27] Hansen U, Ockwell D. Learning and technological capability building in emerging economies: The case of the biomass power equipment industry in Malaysia[J]. Technovation, 34, 617-630(2014).

    [28] Bell M, Figueiredo P. Innovation capability building and learning mechanisms in latecomer firms: Recent empirical contributions and implications for research[J]. Canadian Journal of Development Studies, 33, 14-40(2012).

    [29] Fan C, Scott A. Industrial agglomeration and development: Survey of spatial economic issues in east Asia and a statistical analysis of Chinese regions[J]. Economic Geography, 79, 295-319(2003).

    [30] Boschma R. Proximity and innovation. A critical assessment[J]. Regional Studies, 39, 61-74(2005).

    [31] Zhou Y, Zhu S, He C. Learning from yourself or learning from neighbours: Knowledge spillovers, institutional context and firm upgrading[J]. Regional Studies, 53, 1397-1409(2019).

    [32] Figueiredo P. Learning, capability accumulation and firms differences: Evidence from latecomer steel[J]. Industrial and Corporate Change, 12, 607-643(2003).

    [33] Krugman P. Increasing returns and economic geography[J]. Journal of Political Economy, 99, 483-499(1991).

    [34] Porter M. Location, competition and economic development: Local clusters in a global economy[J]. Economic Development Quarterly, 14, 15-34(2000).

    [35] Scott A. New Industrial Space: Flexible Production Organization and Regional Development in North America and Western Europe[J]. London: Pion, 10-35(1988).

    [36] Piore M, Sabel C. The Second Industrial Divide[J]. New York: Basic Books, 3-18(1984).

    [37] Storper M. The resurgence of regional economies, ten years later: The region as a nexus of untraded interdependencies[J]. European Urban and Regional Studies, 2, 191-221(1995).

    [38] Grabher G. Rediscovering the social in the economics of interfirm relations. London and New York: Routledge, 1-31(1993).

    [40] Granovetter M. Economic action and social structure: The problem of embeddedness[J]. American Journal of Sociology, 91, 481-510(1985).

    [41] Hagedoorn J. Strategic technology alliances and modes of cooperation in high-technology industries. London and New York: Routledge, 116-137(1993).

    [43] Walker R. The geography of production. A Companion to Economic Geography. Malden, Oxford, Carlton: Blackwell Publishing, 113-132(2005).

    [44] Harvey D. The spatial fix: Hegel, Von Thunen, and Marx[J]. Antipode, 13, 1-12(1981).

    [45] Harvey D. The Condition of Postmodernity[J]. Cambridge (MA) and Oxford: Blackwell, 240-259(1992).

    [46] Massey D. Spatial Divisions of Labour: Social Structures and the Geography of Production[J]. London: Macmillan, 1-11(1984).

    [47] Gereffi G. The organization of buyer-driven global commodity chains: How US retailers shape overseas production networks. Westport, CT: Praeger, 95-122(1994).

    [48] Coe N, Yeung H. Global Production Networks: Theorizing Economic Development in an Interconnected World, 95-104(2015).

    [49] Randelli F, Lombardi M. The role of leading firms in the evolution of SME clusters: Evidence from the leather products cluster in Florence[J]. European Planning Studies, 22, 1199-1211(2014).

    [50] Hassink R, Isaksen A, Trippl M. Towards a comprehensive understanding of new regional industrial path development[J]. Regional Studies, 53, 1636-1645(2019).

    [51] Yin R. Case Study Research Design and Methods (Fourth Edition). Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore,[J]. Washington DC: SAGE, 46-50(2009).

    [53] Gereffi G, Humphrey J, Sturgeon T. The governance of global value chains[J]. Review of International Political Economy, 12, 78-104(2005).

    Guojun YU, Canfei HE, Shengjun ZHU. Industrial cluster resilience: Technological innovation, relational governance, and market diversification[J]. Geographical Research, 2020, 39(6): 1343
    Download Citation