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E-raamat: Global City Debate Reconsidered: Economic Globalization in Contemporary Dutch Cities

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Pallas Publications
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040788943
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Pallas Publications
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040788943

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The idea of the “global city,” which focuses on globalization’s impact on the social, financial, and political reality of cities in advanced economies, has become widely influential in the decades since its introduction—and yet the major issues in the “global city debate” remain unresolved. This book provides a systematic overview of the debate and associated theoretical approaches, as well as an argument for the need to test the framework’s experimental validity before the unresolved questions can be fruitfully addressed. By testing data from the Netherlands in the 1990s and 2000s, the author demonstrates the value of rigorous empirical scrutiny while offering fresh insights for the global city debate as a whole.
Acknowledgements 9(2)
1 Introduction
11(16)
1.1 Reconsidering the global city debate
11(3)
1.2 Scrutinizing the global city debate: major issues
14(6)
1.2.1 The changing economic base of cities
14(3)
1.2.2 Advanced producer services and labour demand
17(1)
1.2.3 The new international division of labour and immigration
18(2)
1.3 Scrutinizing the global city debate: blind spot
20(2)
1.4 Research questions
22(1)
1.5 Research framework
22(5)
2 The changing economic base of cities
27(18)
2.1 Introduction
27(1)
2.2 Three scenarios on employment growth in the advanced producer services
28(4)
2.2.1 The two clustering arguments in the global city theoretical framework
28(3)
2.2.2 The clustering argument in the global city debate
31(1)
2.3 Assessing employment growth in the advanced producer services
32(4)
2.4 What drives deindustrialization and growth in services?
36(5)
2.5 Conclusions
41(4)
3 Advanced producer services and labour demand
45(28)
3.1 Introduction
45(1)
3.2 Polarization, professionalization and mismatch
46(5)
3.2.1 The polarization thesis
46(3)
3.2.2 The professionalization thesis
49(1)
3.2.3 Polarization and professionalization in Dutch cities
50(1)
3.3 Assessing the impact of advanced producer services on labour demand
51(5)
3.4 A consumerist alternative: cultural amenities and the demand for low-skilled labour
56(5)
3.5 Disentangling a productivist and consumerist explanation for unemployment among less-educated urbanites
61(5)
3.6 Conclusions
66(7)
4 Foreign direct investment and immigration
73(16)
4.1 Introduction
73(1)
4.2 Immigration in the global city: theoretical framework
74(3)
4.3 Assessing the push and pull factors of the new immigration
77(8)
4.3.1 Assessing Dutch FDI as a push factor for immigration
77(6)
4.3.2 Assessing growth in the advanced producer services as a pull factor for immigration
83(2)
4.4 Conclusions
85(4)
5 Immigration and unemployment
89(12)
5.1 Introduction
89(1)
5.2 The substitution thesis
90(4)
5.2.1 The substitution thesis: theory and evidence
90(1)
5.2.2 The substitution thesis and the urban economy
91(3)
5.3 Assessing the substitution thesis on unemployment
94(2)
5.4 Conclusions
96(5)
6 Conclusions and discussion
101(22)
6.1 Introduction
101(1)
6.2 After the unravelling: theoretical and empirical implications
101(13)
6.2.1 The changing economic base of cities
102(3)
6.2.2 Advanced producer services and labour demand
105(5)
6.2.3 The new international division of labour and immigration
110(2)
6.2.4 The impact of immigration on urban labour markets
112(2)
6.3 The new conceptual architecture reconsidered
114(5)
6.4 Globalization or neo-liberalization? On science versus politics
119(4)
Epilogue: The 2008 financial crisis and its aftermath 123(5)
Appendix A Polarization and professionalization studies 128(3)
Appendix B Data & operationalization 131(9)
Appendix C Employment shares in manufacturing for each metropolitan area 1995-2007 140(1)
Appendix D Robustness checks 141(6)
Literature 147(10)
Index 157
Political and urban sociologist Jeroen van der Waal is Associate Professor of Sociology at Erasmus University Rotterdam. He primarily investigates the impact of globalisation on inequality, value orientations and voting behaviour in the west. For details, see: www.jeroenvanderwaal.com