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Keywords = evolutionary economic geography

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22 pages, 2745 KiB  
Article
Industrial Diversification, Entrepreneurship, and Urban Economic Resilience
by Yiwei Chen and Congbin Guo
Systems 2025, 13(5), 366; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems13050366 - 9 May 2025
Viewed by 594
Abstract
Based on the relevant framework of evolutionary geography, this article explores the direct effect of industrial diversification on urban economic resilience and its indirect effect on urban economic resilience through entrepreneurial spirit. The research finds that during the period from 2018 to 2023, [...] Read more.
Based on the relevant framework of evolutionary geography, this article explores the direct effect of industrial diversification on urban economic resilience and its indirect effect on urban economic resilience through entrepreneurial spirit. The research finds that during the period from 2018 to 2023, cities with a stronger degree of industrial diversification demonstrated stronger economic resilience in the face of external shocks. Industrial diversification can not only disperse the risks from external shocks, but more importantly, it can stimulate entrepreneurial spirit, thereby promoting innovation and transformation in industries and enhancing the economic resilience of cities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Systems Practice in Social Science)
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25 pages, 2879 KiB  
Article
Unlocking Green Export Opportunities: Empirical Insights from Southern Cone Economies
by Carla Carolina Pérez-Hernández, María Guadalupe Montiel-Hernández and Blanca Cecilia Salazar-Hernández
Sustainability 2025, 17(5), 2257; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17052257 - 5 Mar 2025
Viewed by 1117
Abstract
This paper develops a strategic framework that integrates the theoretical perspectives of evolutionary economic geography and economic complexity to identify green export opportunities. By combining feasibility factors—such as green specialization, relatedness, and trade inertia—with desirability criteria like income, equity, and low emissions, the [...] Read more.
This paper develops a strategic framework that integrates the theoretical perspectives of evolutionary economic geography and economic complexity to identify green export opportunities. By combining feasibility factors—such as green specialization, relatedness, and trade inertia—with desirability criteria like income, equity, and low emissions, the framework offers a comprehensive approach to identify green export diversification. The empirical application, focused on the Southern Cone (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay), suggests that economies should prioritize green opportunities aligned with their existing capabilities, gradually expanding into higher-risk, higher-return options. The study provides tailored green export diversification portfolios for each country, identifying key opportunities in renewable energy products for Argentina and Brazil, lithium-related inputs for Chile, biofuels for Paraguay, and green hydrogen for Uruguay. These findings offer valuable insights for the design of public policies aimed at fostering green export diversification. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Ecological Transition in Economics)
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24 pages, 9030 KiB  
Article
Spatial Dynamics of Specialized and Sophisticated Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises on New High-Quality Productive Forces from an Evolutionary Economic Geography Perspective
by Huibo Zhong, Mingwei Chu, Yuhang Xia, Keyu Zhai and Xing Gao
Land 2025, 14(1), 2; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14010002 - 24 Dec 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 970
Abstract
Amidst global economic stagnation, China is undergoing a significant economic transformation by fostering new high-quality productive forces (NHPFs). In this transformative context, specialized and sophisticated small and medium-sized enterprises (SpecSof SMEs) play a critical role. This paper develops a framework from an evolutionary [...] Read more.
Amidst global economic stagnation, China is undergoing a significant economic transformation by fostering new high-quality productive forces (NHPFs). In this transformative context, specialized and sophisticated small and medium-sized enterprises (SpecSof SMEs) play a critical role. This paper develops a framework from an evolutionary economic geography (EEG) perspective to analyze how these SMEs influence NHPFs. The study assesses the impact of specialized and sophisticated SMEs on NHPFs using OLS and addresses potential endogeneity issues through the application of instrumental variables. The results show that the Specialized and Sophistication Index (SSI) positively impacts NHPFs, with its effect strengthening from the company to the municipal level (by about 25%) but weakening at the provincial and national levels (to half of the municipal level), highlighting a clear marginal effect on regional NHPFs. Additionally, the geographically weighted regression (GWR) model was employed to investigate the complex and spatially varied relationships between key characteristics of specialized and sophisticated SMEs and NHPFs. Our findings suggest that while the relationship between SSI and NHPFs is generally positive, it is spatially heterogeneous, arising from variations in regional economic structures, market maturity, and industrial characteristics. This study provides a theoretical framework for understanding regional disparities in NHPF development through SpecSof SMEs and offers empirical evidence to inform region-specific policies and spatial planning strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Urban Contexts and Urban-Rural Interactions)
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23 pages, 7102 KiB  
Article
Research on the Evolution Network Model of the Landslide Disaster Chain: A Case Study of the Baige Landslide
by Feng Gao, Xiu Gao, Chun Yang and Jielin Li
Appl. Sci. 2024, 14(2), 499; https://doi.org/10.3390/app14020499 - 5 Jan 2024
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2422
Abstract
In the context of Western China’s unique geography, recurrent landslide disasters pose substantial threats to both resident safety and economic stability. The escalating frequency of these incidents emphasizes the critical need for innovative disaster research, particularly focused on the concept of a disaster [...] Read more.
In the context of Western China’s unique geography, recurrent landslide disasters pose substantial threats to both resident safety and economic stability. The escalating frequency of these incidents emphasizes the critical need for innovative disaster research, particularly focused on the concept of a disaster chain. This research aims to enhance disaster preparedness and management strategies with the ultimate goal of minimizing losses. On the basis of predecessors, this study changes the previous analysis forms of single or partial disaster events, innovatively collects all secondary disaster events derived from the landslide disaster chain, and builds an evolutionary network model. In concrete terms, our study concentrates on the Baige landslide within the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, pinpointing sub-hazard events as crucial disaster nodes within the landslide. By establishing directed connections, we have developed a comprehensive landslide disaster chain evolution network model firmly grounded in the principles of disaster chain dynamics and complex network theory. This model encompasses 31 distinct disaster nodes and 77 connecting edges. To assess the inherent risks in the landslide catastrophe chain, we conducted a thorough analysis considering node access degree and clustering coefficients. Critical nodes driving economic losses, such as floods, debris flows, secondary landslides, and downstream water damage, were identified. Additionally, we isolated vulnerable connections within the evolving network, evaluating the susceptibility of each edge. Our research underscores the significance of proactive measures, including pre-disaster monitoring, early warning systems, and timely post-disaster information dissemination. Implementing these actions can play a pivotal role in mitigating the impact of landslide disasters, preserving lives and sustaining regional prosperity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Novel Technology in Landslide Monitoring and Risk Assessment)
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18 pages, 2996 KiB  
Article
The Evolutionary Process and Mechanism of Cultural Landscapes: An Integrated Perspective of Landscape Ecology and Evolutionary Economic Geography
by Zhiqiang Gong, Zhuting Zhang, Jianqin Zhou, Jiami Zhou and Wenhui Wang
Land 2022, 11(11), 2062; https://doi.org/10.3390/land11112062 - 17 Nov 2022
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 4916
Abstract
Cultural landscapes are joint masterpieces of man and nature with outstanding universal value. Adequate knowledge of their evolutionary process and mechanism is crucial to their development, protection, and management. However, theoretical understanding about such has been limited as existing studies tend to focus [...] Read more.
Cultural landscapes are joint masterpieces of man and nature with outstanding universal value. Adequate knowledge of their evolutionary process and mechanism is crucial to their development, protection, and management. However, theoretical understanding about such has been limited as existing studies tend to focus on the descriptive and interpretative analysis of the evolutionary process and pay less attention to the underlying mechanism of the process. Integrating the traditional perspective of landscape ecology in cultural landscape research and theories of path dependence and path creation in evolutionary economic geography, this paper constructs a triple-layered integrated analytical framework of cultural landscape evolution and applies the framework to empirically examine the cultural landscape evolution of Mount Lushan. To grasp an accurate and full picture of the process, field observation and historical data collection were carried out, and a combination of thematic analysis and chronological organization was conducted. The research finds that the cultural landscape evolution of Mount Lushan has experienced three stages, i.e., coexistence and mutual influence of multiple cultures, conflict and integration of Chinese and Western cultures, as well as landscape transformation, revival, and expansion. Such evolution is a non-linear, dynamic, and complex process across which the elements, functions, and patterns of landscapes were constantly constructed and reconstructed. Fundamentally, it is the result of the synergistic effect of path dependence and path creation, and is driven by the interplay of the behavior of associated actors and the change of contextuality. The findings of this study can provide some strategic references for the management practice of cultural landscape heritage sites. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Historical Landscape Evolution)
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17 pages, 2412 KiB  
Article
Evolutionary Mechanisms of Ecological Agriculture Innovation Systems: Evidence from Chongming Eco-Island, China
by Yang Yang, Shishuai Ge, Xianzhong Cao and Gang Zeng
Land 2022, 11(11), 1909; https://doi.org/10.3390/land11111909 - 27 Oct 2022
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2381
Abstract
Constructing an ecological–agricultural innovation system (EAIS) and exploring its evolution patterns are effective ways to overcome the current bottleneck in the world’s agricultural development, which is also an important area of concern for economic geography scholars. Based on innovation system and agricultural innovation [...] Read more.
Constructing an ecological–agricultural innovation system (EAIS) and exploring its evolution patterns are effective ways to overcome the current bottleneck in the world’s agricultural development, which is also an important area of concern for economic geography scholars. Based on innovation system and agricultural innovation system (AIS) theories and relevant research literature, this study constructed an analytical framework for the evolution of the EAIS and analyses the characteristics and mechanisms of the EAIS evolution at three levels. With the help of in-depth research data on the ecological agriculture of Chongming’s eco-island, this study analysed the structural composition, evolutionary paths, and mechanisms of Chongming’s ecological–agricultural innovation system (EAIS). The main findings are that the evolutionary structure of the EAIS can be divided into three levels. At the micro level, ecological–agricultural producers and operators are continuously spun off along with the expansion of industry scale under the role of market orientation, technology promotion, and regulatory management. At the meso level, all actors actively seek specialised associations to obtain innovation resources, forming an innovation network. At the macro level, ecological–agricultural regulatory actors incorporate all actors into the ecological regulatory system so that the evolutionary path of the EAIS can be regulated for cleaner production. EAIS is the evolution of innovation systems in synergy between the three levels of ‘actor’ + ‘network’ + ‘institution’. Full article
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16 pages, 1721 KiB  
Article
Understanding the Evolution of Regional Tourism Efficiency: Through the Lens of Evolutionary Economic Geography
by Songsong Zhao, Tai Huang and Jianchao Xi
Sustainability 2022, 14(17), 11042; https://doi.org/10.3390/su141711042 - 4 Sep 2022
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 2851
Abstract
To further understand the evolution of regional tourism efficiency, a more systematic and theoretical analysis is required. Taking the urban agglomeration in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River as a case, this study applied evolutionary economic geography to analyze the evolutionary process [...] Read more.
To further understand the evolution of regional tourism efficiency, a more systematic and theoretical analysis is required. Taking the urban agglomeration in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River as a case, this study applied evolutionary economic geography to analyze the evolutionary process of regional tourism efficiency. Data envelopment analysis (DEA) and the Malmquist index were used to measure the regional tourism efficiency and total factors productivity changes. Moreover, this paper employed the semi-variogram, Kriging interpolation, and Markov chain to explore the spatiotemporal evolution and transition characteristics of regional tourism efficiency. Finally, based on the test results of Geo-detector, the driving mechanism of the spatiotemporal evolution of regional tourism efficiency was constructed. The results show that the overall tourism development was inefficient, and the leading sources of inefficiency were primarily embedded in pure technology inefficiency, while the main contributor to the growth of total factor productivity was the positive technical change. Over time, the spatial spillover effect of regional tourism continued to increase, and the spatial pattern changed from divergence to convergence, resulting in co-evolution. The inertial trajectory of the evolution of regional tourism efficiency reveals a significant path dependence. Factors such as traffic accessibility, tourism resource endowments, tourism specialization, industrial structure, informatization, and openness can reasonably explain the evolution of regional tourism efficiency. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Tourism Research and Regional Sciences)
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25 pages, 1589 KiB  
Article
Spatial Interactions in Business and Housing Location Models
by Katarzyna Kopczewska, Mateusz Kopyt and Piotr Ćwiakowski
Land 2021, 10(12), 1348; https://doi.org/10.3390/land10121348 - 7 Dec 2021
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 5261
Abstract
The paper combines theoretical models of housing and business locations and shows that they have the same determinants. It evidences that classical, behavioural, new economic geography, evolutionary and co-evolutionary frameworks apply simultaneously, and one should consider them jointly when explaining urban structure. We [...] Read more.
The paper combines theoretical models of housing and business locations and shows that they have the same determinants. It evidences that classical, behavioural, new economic geography, evolutionary and co-evolutionary frameworks apply simultaneously, and one should consider them jointly when explaining urban structure. We use quantitative tools in a theory-guided factors induction approach to show the complexity of location models. The paper discusses and measures spatial phenomena as distance-decaying gradients, spatial discontinuities, densities, spillovers, spatial interactions, agglomerations, and as multimodal processes. We illustrate the theoretical discussion with an empirical case of interacting point-patterns for business, housing, and population. The analysis reveals strong links between housing valuation and business location and profitability, accompanied by the related spatial phenomena. It also shows that assumptions concerning unimodal spatial urban structure, the existence of rational maximisers, distance-decaying externalities, and a single pattern of behaviour, do not hold. Instead, the reality entails consideration of multimodality, a mixture of maximisers and satisfiers, incomplete information, appearance of spatial interactions, feed-back loops, as well as the existence of persistence of behaviour, with slow and costly adjustments of location. Full article
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18 pages, 3607 KiB  
Article
Development Path of Industrial Heritage Tourism: A Case Study of Kitakyushu (Japan)
by Zhengyuan Zhao and Zhigao Liu
Sustainability 2021, 13(21), 12099; https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112099 - 2 Nov 2021
Cited by 13 | Viewed by 5922
Abstract
Industrial heritage tourism is aimed at promoting sustainable development in the regional social economy. Japan published Heritage Constellations of Industrial Modernization in 2007 and 2008, and treated them as an important resource to promote the activation of the local economy. Evolutionary economic geography [...] Read more.
Industrial heritage tourism is aimed at promoting sustainable development in the regional social economy. Japan published Heritage Constellations of Industrial Modernization in 2007 and 2008, and treated them as an important resource to promote the activation of the local economy. Evolutionary economic geography offers a useful framework for studying the evolution of industries and has already been applied to study the different types of tourism destinations, what is often unclear, however, is under what conditions declining industrial cities can be transformed into an industrial heritage tourism destination and by whom. Thus, this article tries to employ the EEG approach to understand the development of industrial heritage tourism in Japan, using Kitakyushu City as a case. The case of Kitakyushu City illustrates the importance of initial conditions and stakeholder collaboration in promote the development of industrial heritage tourism. The results of this study also showed that participation of community residents and the application of new technologies, strong support from national and local governments are critical to the new path creation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Tourism, Culture, and Heritage)
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26 pages, 1573 KiB  
Review
Solid Waste Management in Small Tourism Islands: An Evolutionary Governance Approach
by Kylie Ching Mun Wang, Khai Ern Lee and Mazlin Mokhtar
Sustainability 2021, 13(11), 5896; https://doi.org/10.3390/su13115896 - 24 May 2021
Cited by 26 | Viewed by 11887
Abstract
In many regions and nations, solid waste management is deemed as critical, complicated, and multifaceted. The essence of solid waste management in each society can be influenced by a variety of economic activities and physical geographies. Small islands with their geographic isolation and [...] Read more.
In many regions and nations, solid waste management is deemed as critical, complicated, and multifaceted. The essence of solid waste management in each society can be influenced by a variety of economic activities and physical geographies. Small islands with their geographic isolation and a tourism-driven economy pose a great challenge in ensuring sustainability in respect to solid waste management. Beyond the issues of solid waste management on small islands, the governance of solid waste management particularly requires distinctive attention. This aspect is often disregarded as it is a tricky issue for many governments, especially on the territories of small islands. Through the lens of Evolutionary Governance Theory, this paper examines the rigidity in the governance of solid waste management, particularly on small islands, in how related issues are addressed. A range of aspects of governance of solid waste management are analyzed and gaps are identified to propose a way forward in approaching governance problems on small islands through the conceptualization of evolutionary governance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Management)
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27 pages, 4437 KiB  
Article
Breaking the Black-Box of Regional Resilience: A Taxonomy Using a Dynamic Cumulative Shift-Share Occupational Approach
by Francesca Silvia Rota, Marco Bagliani and Paolo Feletig
Sustainability 2020, 12(21), 9070; https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219070 - 31 Oct 2020
Cited by 13 | Viewed by 3146
Abstract
In the European literature on the regional and local development, the concept of resilience has progressively gained momentum, eventually overcoming that of competitiveness and posing a critical challenge for the future of territorial studies and the territorialisation of the policy discourse. In the [...] Read more.
In the European literature on the regional and local development, the concept of resilience has progressively gained momentum, eventually overcoming that of competitiveness and posing a critical challenge for the future of territorial studies and the territorialisation of the policy discourse. In the current economic turmoil, the success of an urban and regional economy relies more and more on its capacity to react to sudden shocks in a positive and evolutionary perspective, i.e., in its resilience. Nevertheless, as a recent analysis of the employment dynamics of Italian metro-regions in the period before and after 2008 has demonstrated that the existing taxonomies may be distant from reality and hardly communicable. The paper proposes a taxonomy of regional resilience based on the consideration of the region’s capacity of both improving its employment rate during the pre-crisis period and overcoming the concurrent performance of the nation. Via a shift-share analysis of the employment in Italian metro-regions, the paper investigates the contribution of the sectoral structure of the local labour market in terms of economic resilience. The result is twofold: a geography of the dynamism of the territorial systems in Italy that diverges from some “classic” interpretative frameworks; a novel taxonomic approach to regional resilience. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Bridging the Gap: The Measure of Urban Resilience)
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14 pages, 309 KiB  
Article
The Decline of Tourist Destinations: An Evolutionary Perspective on Overtourism
by Maximilian Benner
Sustainability 2020, 12(9), 3653; https://doi.org/10.3390/su12093653 - 1 May 2020
Cited by 45 | Viewed by 11199
Abstract
The term overtourism has generated considerable attention both in academic discourse and public debate. The actual or perceived impact of overtourism on destinations has significant ecological, social, and cultural consequences. However, a crucial question remains unanswered: What does overtourism do to a destination’s [...] Read more.
The term overtourism has generated considerable attention both in academic discourse and public debate. The actual or perceived impact of overtourism on destinations has significant ecological, social, and cultural consequences. However, a crucial question remains unanswered: What does overtourism do to a destination’s tourism industry itself? At the core of this question is whether overtourism is a self-limiting phenomenon or a cumulative one, and how precisely overtourism shapes patterns of quantitative or qualitative decline of a destination’s tourism sector. This article offers a conceptual discussion of the impact of overtourism on a destination’s local tourism sector by refining the latter stages of Butler’s tourist area lifecycle through forms of path decline known from evolutionary economic geography. By combining these two theorical approaches and refining the typology of path decline from evolutionary economic geography to the case of tourism under an overtourism scenario, this article suggests that, in the absence of exogenous changes due to policy interventions or public pressure, under an overtourism scenario, a destination’s tourism sector might contract, downgrade, dislocate, and eventually even disappear. Further research should focus on how to prevent these forms of path decline. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Tourism, Economic Growth and Sustainability)
17 pages, 1352 KiB  
Article
Lost in Transition? Directions for an Economic Geography of Urban Sustainability Transitions
by Sebastian Fastenrath and Boris Braun
Sustainability 2018, 10(7), 2434; https://doi.org/10.3390/su10072434 - 12 Jul 2018
Cited by 30 | Viewed by 7987
Abstract
Socio-technical transitions towards more sustainable modes of production and consumption are receiving increasing attention in the academic world and also from political and economic decision-makers. There is increasing demand for resource-efficient technologies and institutional innovations, particularly at the city level. However, it is [...] Read more.
Socio-technical transitions towards more sustainable modes of production and consumption are receiving increasing attention in the academic world and also from political and economic decision-makers. There is increasing demand for resource-efficient technologies and institutional innovations, particularly at the city level. However, it is widely unclear how processes of change evolve and develop and how they are embedded in different socio-spatial contexts. While numerous scholars have contributed to the vibrant research field around sustainability transitions, the geographical expertise largely has been ignored. The lack of knowledge about the role of spatial contexts, learning processes, and the co-evolution of technological, economical, and socio-political processes has been prominently addressed. Bridging approaches from Transition Studies and perspectives of Economic Geography, the paper presents conceptual ideas for an evolutionary and relational understanding of urban sustainability transitions. The paper introduces new perspectives on sustainability transitions towards a better understanding of socio-spatial contexts. Full article
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