Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:600Hits:20139821Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID119914
Title ProperFrom 'wannabe' Silicon valley to global back office? examining the socio-spatial consequences of technopole planning practices in Malaysia
LanguageENG
AuthorBrooker, Daniel
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Cyberjaya is one of a long line of aspiring science and technology parks in the Asia-Pacific region that have attempted to create a successful technopole, and in doing so become the 'Silicon Valley of Asia'. The paper attends to the place-making strategies through which Cyberjaya was positioned as a new 'global hub' for information communication technology and multimedia industries, framed as an extremely 'sticky place' (Markusen, 1996). That is, a place within a global economic system where local skills, infrastructure and capital attracts and makes research and development and corporate headquarters reluctant to leave. The paper considers that despite considerable infrastructural investment and state-led urban boosterism to 'sell' Cyberjaya to prospective investors, more than 10 years after its completion in 1999 the development has become little more than a zone of disconnected business process outsourcing industries comprising low value-added outsourcing activities.
`In' analytical NoteAsia Pacific Viewpoint Vol. 54, No.1; Apr 2013: p.1-14
Journal SourceAsia Pacific Viewpoint Vol. 54, No.1; Apr 2013: p.1-14
Key WordsBack Office ;  Business Process Outsourci (BPO) ;  Cyberjaya ;  Malaysia ;  Multimedia Super Corridor (MSC) ;  Silicon Valley