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Book
Understanding Local Economic Development
(2021)
  • Emil Malizia, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • Edward Feser, Oregon State University
  • Henry Renski, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
  • Joshua Drucker
Abstract
This book offers insights into the process and the practice of local economic development. Bridging the gap between theory and practice, it demonstrates the relevance of theory to inform local strategic planning in the context of widespread disparities in regional economic performance.

The book summarizes the core theories of economic development, applies each of these to professional practice, and provides detailed commentary on them. This updated second edition includes more recent contributions—regional innovation, agglomeration, and dynamic theories—and presents the major ideas that inform economic development strategic planning, particularly in the United States and Canada. The text offers theoretical insights that help explain why some regions thrive while others languish and why metropolitan economies often rise and fall over time. Without theory, economic developers can only do what is politically feasible. This text, however, provides them with a logical tool for thinking about development and establishing an independent basis on which the local consensus needed for evidence-based action undertaken in the public interest can be built.

Offering valuable perspectives on both the process and the practice of local and regional economic development, this book will be useful for both current and future economic developers to think more profoundly and confidently about their local economy.
Keywords
  • economic development,
  • state and local government,
  • regional development theory
Publication Date
January, 2021
Publisher
Routledge
Citation Information
Emil Malizia, Edward Feser, Henry Renski and Joshua Drucker. Understanding Local Economic Development. 2nd Edition.Abingdon, United Kingdom(2021)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jdrucker/46/