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Ann Markusen

Researcher at University of Minnesota

Publications -  121
Citations -  9813

Ann Markusen is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Politics & Metropolitan area. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 120 publications receiving 9427 citations. Previous affiliations of Ann Markusen include Rutgers University & Council on Foreign Relations.

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Sticky Places in Slippery Space: A Typology of Industrial Districts*

TL;DR: The authors identified three types of industrial districts, with quite disparate firm configurations, internal versus external orientations, and governance structures: a hub-and-spoke industrial district, revolving around one or more dominant, externally oriented firms; a satellite platform, an assemblage of unconnected branch plants embedded in external organization links; and the state-anchored district, focused on one ormore public-sector institutions.
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Urban Development and the Politics of a Creative Class: Evidence from a Study of Artists:

TL;DR: In this article, a case study of artists, one element of the purported creative class, is used to probe this phenomenon, demonstrating that the formation, location, urban impact, and politics of this occupation are much more complex and distinctive than has been suggested previously.
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Fuzzy Concepts, Scanty Evidence, Policy Distance: The Case for Rigour and Policy Relevance in Critical Regional Studies

TL;DR: Arkanen et al. as discussed by the authors define fuzzy concepts and relate their proliferation to an emphasis on process rather than institutions, agents and behaviour, and show that fuzzy concepts are difficult to test or operationalize: flexible specialization, windows of opportunity, resurgent regions, world cities, cooperative competition.
Book

Profit cycles, oligopoly, and regional development

Ann Markusen
TL;DR: Markusen's profit-cycle theory as mentioned in this paper proposes that changing sources of profitability along an industry's evolutionary path will first concentrate and later disperse production geographically, setting in motion a methodically destabilizing process for regional economies.
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The Artistic Dividend: Urban Artistic Specialisation and Economic Development Implications

TL;DR: In this article, the authors take a labour-centred view of the arts economy, hypothesising that many artists choose a locale in which to work, often without regard to particular employers but in response to a nur...