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Polycentric Urban Trajectories and Urban Cultural Economy

In: Metropolitan Regions

Author

Listed:
  • Michaël Deinema

    (University of Amsterdam)

  • Robert Kloosterman

    (Amsterdam Institute of Metropolitan and International Development Studies (AMIDSt) and University of Amsterdam)

Abstract

This chapter traces the urban employment trends in cultural industries in the Netherlands from 1899 onwards and argues that a historical approach is necessary to understand economic geographical patterns in this post-industrial growth sector. Longitudinal employment data for the country’s four main cities, as well as case-study information on the spatial and institutional development of separate cultural industries in the Netherlands, reveal long-term intercity hierarchies of performance and historically-rooted local specializations. The effects of historical local trajectories on the inter-urban distribution of Dutch cultural production are weighed against more volatile factors such as creative class densities. Implications for the general outlook and development of these post-industrial urban economies are then explored, whereby the connectivity of the cities in international and regional networks is taken into account. The chapter concludes with identifying the evolutionary mechanisms at work in Dutch cultural industries and the value of a historical perspective vis-à-vis other geographical approaches to the urban cultural economy. As the four examined Dutch cities are all part of the Randstad megacity region, the dynamic Dutch urban cultural economy represents an unlikely case for stable inequalities between cities based on local trajectories. Consequently, strong implications may be inferred for cultural industry dynamics in other contexts.

Suggested Citation

  • Michaël Deinema & Robert Kloosterman, 2013. "Polycentric Urban Trajectories and Urban Cultural Economy," Advances in Spatial Science, in: Johan Klaesson & Börje Johansson & Charlie Karlsson (ed.), Metropolitan Regions, edition 127, chapter 0, pages 339-373, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:adspcp:978-3-642-32141-2_15
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-32141-2_15
    as

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