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HERON, RICHARD LE
(2)
answer(s).
Srl
Item
1
ID:
076393
Globalisation, governance and post-structural political economy: perspectives from Australasia
/ Heron, Richard Le
Heron, Richard Le
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
2007.
Summary/Abstract
The paper argues that post-structural political economy (PSPE) offers geography and geographers interesting potential for the development of a style of geographic inquiry that has qualities that may be constitutive of progressive spaces. This new style of inquiry is seen as adding to the repertoire of political strategies and potential geographies of responsibility and extending notions of ethical behaviours. Issues relating to the assemblage of PSPE as a distinctive approach to knowledge production are considered and situated in the Australasian context. Discussion focuses especially on insight about the use of PSPE derived from three illustrative research case studies (a project on learning challenges in sheep meat and dairy supply chain realignment, tensions around fisheries management in New Zealand and an international workshop series on the topic of governmentality). The case studies provide a lens on the socio-spatial relationships between globalisation and governance and interrogate the value of PSPE for understanding the connections between individual choices, governing practices and the construction of the globalising economy. The PSPE approach if actively incorporated into research processes may have important implications for future relationships between social responsibility, national economic development and globalisation
Key Words
Globalization
;
Governance
;
Governmentality
;
Knowledge Production
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2
ID:
090010
'Rooms and moments' in neoliberalising policy trajectories of m: towards constituting progressive spaces through post-structural political economy
/ Heron, Richard Le
Heron, Richard Le
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
2009.
Summary/Abstract
This paper seeks to open up what economic geographers think they can do as academics engaging in the policy realm. It draws on the author's role as an academic and his policy persona as academic expert and academic with expertise that has been guided by post-structural political economy (PSPE) thinking. It is Auckland-centred, situated in three trajectories: PSPE thought and practice developing at the University of Auckland, the Auckland Regional Economic Development Strategy (AREDS) trajectory of the Auckland Regional Council and Auckland City Council's sustainability trajectory. The paper recovers in PSPE terms dimensions of two 2006 policy moments, those of the Metropolitan Auckland Project (MAP) and the Mayoral Taskforce on Sustainable Development (MTSD), in which the author participated. Placing intellectual (PSPE) and policy trajectories (growth and sustainability) into conversation allows a unique exploration of co-constitutive dimensions between academy and policy worlds. Conceptually and methodologically, the moments in the policy trajectories are accessed by (i) analytic description of the policy trajectory from the outside in terms of academic understandings of institutional processes and (ii) in-the-room deliberations about policy decision possibilities. New insights about academy-policy relations emerge from the PSPE focus on rooms and moments.
Key Words
Economic Geography
;
New Zealand
;
Post-Structural Political Economy
;
Academy-Policy Relations
;
Moments
;
Neoliberalising Policy Trajectories
;
Rooms
;
Auckland
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