Global Conference on Economic Geography

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


National University of Singapore

5-9th December 2000



GLOBAL CONFERENCE ON ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY

 

 

PROGRAMME AND ABSTRACTS

 

 

5-9th December 2000, National University of Singapore

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Organised by

 

 

Department of Geography, National University of Singapore

 

 Founded 1905

 

in collaboration with economic geography study groups of

the Association of American Geographers, Royal Geographical Society-Institute of British Geographers, Institute of Australian Geographers, International Geographical Union and Commonwealth Geographical Bureau.


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

 

 

The organisers would like to thank the following organisations and institutions for their generous support and sponsorship of the conference.

 

Academic Research Fund, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, National University of Singapore

 

Blackwell Publishers

 

Economic Geography

 


CONTENTS

 

Acknowledgements                                                                    iv

 

Information for participants                                                      vi

 

Programme summary                                                                  1

 

Detailed programme                                                                    6

 

Abstracts (in alphabetical order of authors’ surnames)            20

 

List of non-presenting participants                                          86

 

Session participant index                                                          88

 
INFORMATION FOR PARTICIPANTS

 

Conference Rationale

 

There are few opportunities for "economic geographers" (broadly defined) to engage in genuinely global dialogue. In the context of globalising tendencies in the world economy, such dialogue is increasingly important for it facilitates the development of knowledge, and the establishment of international collaborative relations for both teaching and research. Such dialogue also requires economic geographers to face head on the complex issues of vantage point and ethnocentric bias.

 

We believe the timing is appropriate for a global conference on economic geography. As one of the key sub-disciplines in Geography, it is time to discuss and debate current research agendas in economic geography. It is also a critical time to rethink the relationship between the sub-discipline (within human geography) and the wider social science community; a "project" invigorated by the recent collection Geographies of Economies (eds. Roger Lee and Jane Wills, 1997, Arnold), and the American Association of Geographers Economic Geography Specialty Group’s initiatives (details available at http://www.ucc.uconn.edu/~wwwgeog/aagecon.html).

 

In organising this global conference on economic geography, we have three specific objectives:

 

¨      The conference will provide a forum for constructive cross-regional dialogue among economic geographers from all regions and countries. Such dialogue is critical for the advancement of the subject.

 

¨      The conference will provide an opportunity for economic geographers from outside Asia to interact with geographers and other interested social scientists from within the host region. While acknowledging the Anglo-American influence in much of the recent work in economic geography, we recognise that there is a considerable stock of knowledge in the Asian region that contributes to our understanding of regional and global economic geographies. In short, the conference will enhance the global interdependence of networks of economic geographers.

 

¨      The conference and its associated activities will enable economic geographers from outside the Asian region to experience (first-hand) the dynamics of economic transformations in Singapore and Southeast Asia. Through carefully designed field trips, both within and outside of Singapore, the conference will offer insightful educational experiences that can be brought home for the benefits of students and institutions.

 

Conference Organising Committee

 

Tim Bunnell (National University of Singapore) – Treasurer

Neil Coe (University of Manchester, UK)

Philip Kelly (York University, Canada)

Andrew Marton (University of Nottingham, UK)

Kris Olds (National University of Singapore) – Chairperson

Martin Perry (National University of Singapore) – Treasurer

Jessie Poon (University of Buffalo-SUNY, USA)

K. Raguraman (National University of Singapore)

Henry Wai-chung Yeung (National University of Singapore) – Secretary

 

Transport to/from the Conference

 

Public transport

 

NUS campus is served by a variety of buses. If you are travelling to NUS by public transport take the MRT to Clementi station, walk for five minutes into the bus exchange loop (ask around if you get lost), and then take the 96 bus to NUS. The ride should cost around 60 cents for air-con buses. Make sure you alight at the first stop when the bus turns into NUS campus. Please refer to the map on the inside-cover of this booklet as it will show you where the conference venue is located.  When leaving NUS note that the No. 96 bus goes to Clementi MRT station where you can catch a mass transit train to the downtown area. One other option is a mix of MRT and taxi – taxis are plentiful around the Clementi MRT station and cost approximately S$3-4 to NUS.  See below for more information on taxis.

 

Buses take coins or a TransitLink Farecard – this is a stored-value card which can be used on buses, the MRT and the LRT. Farecards can be bought from or revalued at TransitLink Ticket Sales Offices at various MRT stations and bus interchanges. You can also revalue Farecards at the Automatic Vending Machines using NETS and the Integrated Ticketing Machines using NETS or cash or buy Farecards from MRT Station Control Rooms and selected 7-Eleven outlets.

 

On campus transit

 

There are two internal shuttle bus lines on campus and they stop at a variety of stations throughout the campus.  They cost 20 cents per ride.

 

Taxis

 

Taxis are relatively cheap in Singapore.  You can either wave them down on the street with a waving arm/hand signal, or else telephone and book them. Taxi drivers take cash and some take credit cards.  The three main taxi firms and their respective booking numbers are:

 

¨      CitiCab (552-2222) http://www.citycab.com.sg

 

¨      Comfort (552-1111) http://www.comfortgroup.com.sg/transport.htm

 

¨      Tibs (481-1211)  http://www.tibs.com.sg

 

Please note that taxis are difficult to locate on Friday and Saturday evenings and especially when it starts raining!  It usually costs between S$7 and S$10 to take a taxi from NUS to the downtown area.  Please note that fare rates increase by 50% between midnight and 6:00 am…and please do not waste time trying to find a cab between 11:45 pm and midnight as they are nowhere to be found!

 

Registration

 

Please register for the conference between 8 am and 8:30 am on Wednesday 6 December 2000 at the foyer of AS7 Shaw Foundation Building located in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, National University of Singapore (see the attached map on the inside-cover of this booklet). The registration desk will be open from 8 am to 9 am on Wednesday 6 December and Thursday 7 December 2000.

 

Conference Secretariat

 

The Secretariat is located at the foyer of AS7 Shaw Foundation Building located in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, National University of Singapore. There will be someone to assist you if you have any queries during the conference.

 

You may also contact the Department of Geography (AS2 #03-01) at 874 3853 during office hours (8:30 am - 5:30 pm).

 

Plenary Sessions

 

There are four plenary sessions and one roundtable. The first plenary session will be given by Professor Ash Amin from the University of Durham, England, between 8:45 am and 10:15 am on Wednesday 6 December 2000 at Lecture Theatre 11. This is immediately followed by the Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography Lecture to be given by Professor Chua Beng Huat from the National University of Singapore, between 10:15 am and 11:00 am. The third plenary session will be delivered by Professor Katherine Gibson from Australian National University as an Antipode Lecture in LT11 between 6:15 pm to 7 pm on Wednesday 6 December 2000. The final plenary session will be held between 6:15 pm and 7 pm on Thursday 7 December 2000 at Lecture Theatre 12. Professor Trevor Barnes from the University of British Columbia, Canada, will deliver the lecture.

 

The Antipode roundtable will be held between 6:15 pm and 7 pm on Friday 8 December 2000 at Lecture Theatre 12.

 

Conference Receptions

 

Blackwell Publishers will host the Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography Reception at the foyer of Lecture Theatre 11 between 10:15 am and 11:00 am on Wednesday 6 December 2000. There will be another reception hosted by Blackwell Publishers at the foyer of Lecture Theatre 11 immediately after the Antipode Lecture to be delivered in Lecture Theatre 11 between 6:15 pm to 7 pm on the same day. Economic Geography will host a reception after the plenary session in LT12 between 6:15 pm to 7 pm on Thursday 7 December 2000. You are cordially invited to all three receptions.

 

Lunches

 

The conference registration fees include three lunches from Wednesday 6 December 2000 to Friday 8 December 2000. All lunches will be held in the NUSS Guild House. There will be road signs indicating the location of the NUSS Guild House. Vegetarian and halal options are available.


PROGRAMME SUMMARY

 

TUESDAY 5 DECEMBER 2000 (WHOLE DAY)

 

1. Fieldtrip - Johor, Malaysia: From Agricultural Dependence to Export-Manufacturing Region

Organiser: Tim Bunnell <geotgb@nus.edu.sg>

 

The fieldtrip will commence with a series of briefings in the morning on economic development in the state capital, Johor Bahru. This will include presentations by three of the key institutions involved in state development: Johor Economic Planning Unit (UPEN), Institute Sultan Iskandar and Johor Corporation. The remainder of the schedule consists of visits to industrial sites. The first, a palm oil plantation and processing complex at Ulu Tiram managed by Johor Corporation, reflects the traditional mainstay of the state economy. Lunch will be taken at the site, courtesy of Johor Corporation. The second site, Pasir Gudang industrial township, exemplifies the more recent emphasis of state economic development. There are two pick-up points for the bus, the Visitor's Lodge at NUS (leaving at 7.30 am) and at Merchant Court Hotel (leaving at 8.00 am). The same locations will be used as drop-off points in the evening. We plan to arrive back in Singapore at around 6 pm.

 

2. Fieldtrip - Industrialising Indonesia: Economic and Social Dimensions of Rapid Development on Batam

Organiser: Philip Kelly, York University, Canada <pfkelly@yorku.ca>

 

Participants should meet at 8 am sharp at the Ferry Terminal inside the World Trade Centre on Teloh Blangah Road.  The group will assemble at the Delifrance bakery outlet downstairs from the booking desks. Please remember to bring passports, and visas where necessary.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WEDNESDAY 6 DECEMBER 2000

 

8:00 – 8:30 am

Registration

(Foyer, AS7 Shaw Foundation Building, NUS)

 

8:30 – 8:45 am

Opening Session (Lecture Theatre 11, NUS)

 

8:45 – 10:15 am

Plenary Session (Lecture Theatre 11, NUS)

 

10:15 – 11:00 am

Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography Reception (Foyer, Lecture Theatre 11, NUS)

 

11:00 – 12:45 pm

Session 3.1 Dynamics of urban and regional development I (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

 

Session 3.2 Theories and discourses of economic geography (AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

 

Session 3.3 Geography of service economies I

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

12:45 – 2:00 pm

Lunch (NUSS Guild House)

 

2:00 – 4:00 pm

Session 3.4 Dynamics of urban and regional development II (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

 

Session 3.5 Organising industrial spaces I

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

 

Session 3.6 Geography of service economies II

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

4:00 – 4:30 pm

Tea Break

(Foyer, AS7 Shaw Foundation Building, NUS)

 

4:30 – 6:00 pm

Session 3.7 Dynamics of urban and regional development III (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

 

Session 3.8 Organising industrial spaces II

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

 

Session 3.9 Geography of service economies III

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

6:15 – 7:00 pm

Antipode Lecture (Lecture Theatre 11, NUS)

 

7:00 – 8:00 pm

Blackwell Reception

(Foyer, Lecture Theatre 11, NUS)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THURSDAY 7 DECEMBER 2000

 

8:30 – 10:00 am

Session 4.1 Dynamics of urban and regional development IV (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

 

Session 4.2 Finance and economic geography I

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

 

Session 4.3 Virtual economies I

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-06)

 

10:00 – 10:30 am

Tea Break

(Foyer, AS7 Shaw Foundation Building, NUS)

 

10:30 – 12:30 pm

Session 4.4 Dynamics of urban and regional development V (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

 

Session 4.5 Finance and economic geography II

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

 

Session 4.6 Geographies of transitional economies

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

 

Session 4.7 Virtual economies II

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-06)

 

12:30 – 2:00 pm

Lunch (NUSS Guild House)

 

2:00 – 4:00 pm

Session 4.8 Innovation, learning, and communities of practice I (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

 

Session 4.9 Economy and the environment I

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

 

Session 4.10 Development geography I

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

4:00 – 4:30 pm

Tea Break

(Foyer, AS7 Shaw Foundation Building, NUS)

 

4:30 – 6:00 pm

Session 4.11 Innovation, learning, and communities of practice II (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

 

Session 4.12 Economy and the environment II

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

 

Session 4.13 Development geography II

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

6:15 – 7:00 pm

Plenary Session (Lecture Theatre 12, NUS)

 

7:00 – 8:00 pm

Economic Geography Reception

(Foyer, Lecture Theatre 12, NUS)

 

 

 

 

 

 

FRIDAY 8 DECEMBER 2000

 

8:30 – 10:00 am

Session 5.1 Geographies of international trade and investment I (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

 

Session 5.2 Labour Geographies I

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

 

Session 5.3 Development geography III

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

10:00 – 10:30 am

Tea Break

(Foyer, AS7 Shaw Foundation Building, NUS)

 

10:30 – 12:30 pm

Session 5.4 Geographies of international trade and investment II (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

 

Session 5.5 Labour Geographies II

 (AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

 

Session 5.6 Geographies of global capitalism I

 (AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

 

Session 5.7 Rural and resource economies

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-06)

 

12:30 – 2:00 pm

Lunch (NUSS Guild House)

 

2:00 – 4:00 pm

Session 5.8 Geographies of international trade and investment III (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

 

Session 5.9 Labour Geographies III

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

 

Session 5.10 Geographies of global capitalism II

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

4:00 – 4:30 pm

Tea Break

(Foyer, AS7 Shaw Foundation Building, NUS)

 

4:30 – 6:00 pm

Session 5.11 Geographies of international trade and investment IV (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

 

Session 5.12 Labour Geographies IV

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

 

Session 5.13 Culture and ethnicity in economic geography (AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

6:15 – 7:30 pm

Antipode Roundtable: A Crisis of Economic Geography? (Lecture Theatre 12, NUS)

 

 

SATURDAY 9 DECEMBER 2000 (MORNING)

 

Fieldtrip: Exploring the Diverse Industrial Landscapes of Singapore

Organiser: K. Raguraman Krishnas, National University of Singapore <geokrk@nus.edu.sg>

 

Fieldtrip participants are requested to meet in front of Block AS7, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, NUS at 8.45 a.m. to catch the bus.

 

The fieldtrip will begin with a bus-ride to one of the government organisations involved in economic and industrial planning in Singapore. Officials there will provide a brief presentation on the evolution of the industrial landscape in Singapore over the past 30 years. This will be followed by a guided tour of various industrial sites in Singapore, including business parks, science parks and other planned industrial estates. This will give participants an opportunity to appreciate the changing character of industrial land use in Singapore. The tour will end with lunch at a local restaurant.

 

 


DETAILED PROGRAMME

 

WEDNESDAY 6 DECEMBER 2000

 

8:00 – 8:30 am

Registration

(Foyer, AS7 Shaw Foundation Building, NUS)

 

8:30 – 8:45 am

 

Opening Session (Lecture Theatre 11, NUS)

Welcome Address

Professor Lee Soo Ying

Director, Institutional Resources & Special Duties

National University of Singapore

 

 

8:45 – 10:15 am

Plenary Session (Lecture Theatre 11, NUS)

Chair: Kris Olds, National University of Singapore

Geographers on geographies of globalisation

Professor Ash Amin

University of Durham, UK

 

Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography Lecture

Chair: Victor R. Savage, National University of Singapore

Pop culture China: Conceptualization

Professor Chua Beng Huat

National University of Singapore

 

 

10:15 – 11:00 am

Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography Reception (Foyer, Lecture Theatre 11, NUS)

 


11:00 am – 12:45 pm

Session 3.1 Dynamics of urban and regional development I (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

Session 3.2 Theories and discourses of economic geography (AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

Session 3.3 Geography of service economies I

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

Chair: Meric Gertler, University of Toronto, Canada

 

Agglomeration effects and socioeconomic differentiation: The Australian megametro hierarchy

Scott Baum, University of Queensland, Australia (with Robert Stimson and Kevin O'Connor)

 

The emergence of the network enterprise and agglomeration economies

Peter Cabus, Flanders' Social and Economic Council, Belgium

 

Land use changes in Jakarta

M.H. Dewi Susilowati & Tito Latif Indra, University of Indonesia

 

Globally oriented foreign MNCs as agents of local learning in less developed countries?

Insights from two Asian technology regions (Bangalore, India and Bandung, Indonesia)

Martina Fromhold-Eisebith, University of Technology Aachen, Germany

 

Growing industries in the urban economy? A place perspective

Brita Hermelin, Uppsala University, Sweden

Chair: Philip Kelly, York University, Canada

 

 

Power/economic knowledge: Living on thin abstractions

John Allen, The Open University, UK

 

A review of the development of economic geography in China

Weidong Liu and Dadao Lu, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China

 

The demise of a critical institution of economic geography in Japan

Fujio Mizuoka, Hitotsubashi University, Japan

 

Going postal? Ruptures, breaks and transitions in geographic discourse

Scott Salmon, University of Miami, USA

 

Common ground? Prospects for integrating the economic geography of geographers and economists

Örjan Sjöberg, Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden and Fredrik Sjöholm, National University of Singapore

Chair: Neil Coe, University of Manchester, UK

 

The volatile location of value added in cross-border professional business services transactions

Claes G. Alvstam, Göteborg University, Sweden

 

Services and the new economy: Elements of a research agenda

William B. Beyers, University of Washington, USA

 

The role of the service sector in the restructuring of old industrial regions - the case of the West Midlands

Margareta Dahlström, University of Birmingham, UK

 

Globalisation, producer services and the Asian city

Peter Daniels, University of Birmingham, UK and Kevin O'Connor, Monash University, Australia

 

Shopping and leisure: New patterns of consumer behaviour in Canada and Germany

Ulrike Gerhard, Geographisches Institut

 


12:45 – 2:00 pm

Lunch (NUSS Guild House)

 

2:00 – 4:00 pm

Session 3.4 Dynamics of urban and regional development II (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

Session 3.5 Organising industrial spaces I (AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

Session 3.6 Geography of service economies II

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

Chair: Peter Rimmer, Australian National University, Australia

 

Globalizing urbanization in western Java

Guenter Spreitzhofer, University of Vienna, Austria

 

Will patched old wine skins contain the new vintage?

Greg Heys, University of Newcastle, Australia

 

Urbanization in Bangladesh

Sarwar Jahan and Md. Abdur Rouf, Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology

 

Combatant companies contra content communities

Arnoud Lagendijk, University of Nijmegen and Paivi Oinas, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands

 

Work and daily mobility for men and women in urban space: A century of change

Robin Law, University of Otago, New Zealand

 

Local embeddedness and international competitiveness

Daniel Hallencreutz and Anders Malmberg, Uppasala University, Sweden

Chair: Henry Yeung, National University of Singapore

 

The geography of immigrant firms in Sweden

Ali B Najib, Uppsala University, Sweden

 

Information technology, the state and regional development in Bangalore, India

Balaji Parthasarathy, Indian Institute of Information Technology, India

 

Global value chains and networking: A critical perspective on learning challenges in the New Zealand dairy and meat commodity chains

Richard Le Heron, University of Auckland, New Zealand

 

Globalization and the indigenous dynamic in Taiwan's industrial transformation

Andrew M. Marton, University of Nottingham, UK

 

Dynamics of economic space: New opportunity for economic geography in the new century

Sam Ock Park, Seoul National University, South Korea

Chair: William B. Beyers, University of Washington, USA

 

The organisation of creativity – heterarchies in the media industries

Gernot Grabher, University of Bonn, Germany

 

Service industries and urban transformation within the Asia-Pacific

Thomas A. Hutton, University of British Columbia, Canada

 

Industrial districts in a global city

Sebastian Kinder, University of Oxford, UK

 

Corporate networks and the geographical agglomeration of Japanese firms in Singapore

Kentaro Kuwatsuka, Hiroshima University, Japan

 

Air cargo services and competitive advantage in industrializing economies

Thomas R Leinbach, University of Kentucky, USA and John Bowen, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh, USA

 

Producer services in metropolitan Kuala Lumpur

Nooriah Yusof, Universiti Sains Malaysia

 


4:00 – 4:30 pm

Tea Break (Foyer, AS7 Shaw Foundation Building, NUS)

 

4:30 – 6:00 pm

Session 3.7 Dynamics of urban and regional development III (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

Session 3.8 Organising industrial spaces II (AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

Session 3.9 Geography of service economies II

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

Chair: Shirlena Huang, National University of Singapore

 

The region as a source of firm competitiveness: Biotechnology firms in Australia

Alaric Maude, Flinders University, Australia

 

What will happen to the urban periphery? The Stockholm Archipelago

Urban Nordin, Stockholm University, Sweden

 

The future spatial economic development in Indonesia

Triarko Nurlambang, University of Indonesia

 

Production networks and training under globalization: Lessons from India

Aya Okada, Nagoya University, Japan

Chair: Robert Lewis, University of Toronto, Canada

 

Flexible manufacturing: Factories, urban spaces

Robert Lewis, University of Toronto, Canada

 

Contrasts in agglomeration: Proto industrial, industrial & post industrial forms compared Nick Phelps, University of Cardiff, UK and T. Ozawa, State University of Colorado, USA

 

Building business networks: Organising international production and sales networks, 1850-1914

Gordon Winder, University of Auckland, New Zealand

 

Restructuring and re-scaling of production and research in the pharmaceutical industry Christian Zeller, University of Hamburg, Germany

 

Chair: Peter Daniels, University of Birmingham, UK

 

Elite architects in the Asia-Pacific: Dilemmas of the heteronomous service class

Kris Olds, National University of Singapore

 

The development of economic service centre in the Depok area

Ratna Saraswati and Sugeng Rahardjo, University of Indonesia

 

Knowledge transfer by business related services: Prerequisites and constraints

Peter Sjoholt, Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration, Norway

 

A Cinderella story: The rise of global law firms

Richard Smith, University of Leicester, UK

 

6:15 – 7:00 pm

Antipode Lecture (Lecture Theatre 11, NUS)

Chair: Jamie Peck, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA

Performing the Diverse Economy: Explorations in the Asia-Pacific Region

Professor Katherine Gibson

Australian National University, Australia

 

7:00 – 8:00 pm

Blackwell Reception (Foyer, Lecture Theatre 11, NUS)

 


8:30 – 10:00 am

Session 4.1 Dynamics of urban and regional development IV (AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

Session 4.2 Finance and economic geography I (AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

Session 4.3 Virtual economies I

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-06)

Chair: T.C. Chang, National University of Singapore

 

The rise of the global CBD: Mumbai's space-economy at the turn of the century

Jan Nijman, University of Miami, USA

 

Inter-regional distribution of world income, 1960-1995

Donghyun Park, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

 

The residential status and consumer behaviour in Helsinki metropolitan area

Jorma Pietala, Helsinki School of Economics and Business Administration, Finland

 

Capitalising urbanisation: Asia's mega cities as platforms for globalisation

Peter Rimmer, Australian National University, Australia and Howard Dick, Melbourne University, Australia

Chair: Phillip O'Neill, University of Newcastle, Australia

 

Virtual finance and real geographies of financial exclusion and inclusion in post-deregulation Australia

Neil Argent, University of New England, Australia

 

Changes in inter-corporate ownership and aggregate industry diversification in the Canadian economy, 1976-1995

Milford B. Green, University of Western Ontario, Canada and Rod B. McNaughton, University of Otago, New Zealand

 

Where traders go when stock exchanges go virtual: Urbanisation, localisation, virtualisation and what next?

Vivien Lo and Michael H. Grote, Universitaet Frankfurt, Germany

 

Risk management and the re-scaling of international finance: Technology, the diffusion of trust and geographies of risk

Niall Majury, Queen's University of Belfast, UK

 

Chair: Andrew Leyshon, University of Nottingham, UK

 

Human geographies of the internet

Ian Austin, National Library Board of Singapore

 

Ecommerce: A primer for local and regional development planning

Kenneth E. Corey, Michigan State University, USA

 

The urban and regional geography of the virtual economy

Andrew Gillespie, University of Newcastle, UK

10:00 – 10:30 am

Tea Break (Foyer, AS7 Shaw Foundation Building, NUS)

 

 

 


10:30 – 12:30 pm

Session 4.4 Dynamics of urban and regional development V

(AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

Session 4.5 Finance and economic geography II

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

Chair: Peter Kresl, Bucknell University, USA

 

Special session organised by Peter Kresl:

 

Urban competitiveness in North America

Peter Kresl, Bucknell University, USA

 

Measuring the comparative advantage of the knowledge base in European cities

William F. Lever, University of Glasgow, UK

 

Urban competitiveness in China

Pengfei Ni, Nankai University, China

---------------------------------------------

Spatial transformation and regional integration in Hong Kong-Zhujiang Delta region

Jianfa Shen, Chinese University of Hong Kong

 

Information and communications flows in the integration of Hong Kong and the Pearl River Delta region

Anthony M Townsend, MIT, USA

 

Cities of clubs

Chris Webster, University of Wales, Cardiff, UK

Chair: Milford B. Green, University of Western Ontario, Canada

 

Global trends in finance and corporate governance: Is there still scope for regional variation?

Andrew W. Mullineux, University of Birmingham, UK

 

Analysts, journalists, managers and the investment strategies of a large corporation

Phillip O'Neill, University of Newcastle, Australia

 

Internationalisation of capital market regulation in Europe: History, actors, principles and mechanisms

Dariusz Wójcik, University of Oxford, UK

 

Globalising retail

Neil Wrigley, University of Southampton, UK

 

Grounding capital: The geographic nature of venture financing in the United States

Matthew Zook, University of California at Berkeley, USA

 

Dealing with the internationalization of financial capital: The state and local interests over the banking crisis in Japan

Seiko Kitajima, Hirosaki University, Japan

 

 

 

 



10:30 – 12:30 pm

Session 4.6 Geographies of transitional economies

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

Session 4.7 Virtual economies II

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-06)

Chair: Andrew Marton, University of Nottingham, UK

 

Globalisation, economic transformation and regional change in Russia

Michael Bradshaw, University of Leicester, UK

 

Central Asian states: Geopolitical and foreign trade reorientation

Jarmo Eronen, Helsinki School of Economics and Business Administration, Finland

 

State policy and market power: The transformation of Shanghai under economic reform

Sun Sheng Han, National University of Singapore

 

Economic restructuring of the Russian Barents territories-theory and practice

Markku Tykkylainen, University of Joensuu, Finland

 

Enterprise, embeddedness and exclusion: Business relationships in a small island developing economy

Michael Taylor, University of Portsmouth, UK

 

Zhong Guan Cun and the development of China's computer industry

Yu Zhou, Vassar College, USA

 

Chair: Matthew Zook, University of California at Berkeley, USA

 

The rise of information society

Aharon Kellerman, University of Haifa, Israel

 

Time, space and (digital) compression: Software formats and the re-organisation of the music industry

Andrew Leyshon, University of Nottingham, UK

 

The internet: Its economic geography and policy implications

Edward J. Malecki, University of Florida, USA

 

Chips, bits, and the law: An economic eeography of internet gambling

Mark Wilson, Michigan State University, USA

12:30 – 2:00 pm

Lunch (NUSS Guild House)

 

 

 

 


2:00 – 4:00 pm

Session 4.8 Innovation, learning, and communities of practice I

(AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

Session 4.9 Economy and the environment I (AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

Session 4.10 Development geography I

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

Chair: Peter Maskell, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark

 

Innovation, cluster and context

Bjørn Asheim, University of Oslo, Norway and Keith Smith, The STEP Group, Norway

 

Spaces and scales of innovation

Timothy G. Bunnell, National University of Singapore and Neil M. Coe, University of Manchester, UK

 

The spaces of creative work

Louise Crewe, University of Nottingham, UK

 

Social structures of learning

Meric S. Gertler, University of Toronto, Canada

 

Regional innovation support systems in East Asia and Europe compared

Robert Hassink, University of Bonn, Germany

 

A late-Industrial district: The construction of learning networks in Hsinchu-Taipei corridor in Taiwan

Jinn-yuh Hsu, National Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan

 

Chair: Christian Schulz, University of Cologne, Germany

 

Industry and environment in East Asia: Policy approaches

David P. Angel, Clark University, USA

 

When is a tree not a tree?

Jean Hillier, Curtin University, Australia

 

Economic implications of the degradation of the environment in Malaysia

Hamirdin B. Ithnin, University of Malaya, Malaysia

 

The ecology of external economies

Jerry Patchell, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

Chair: Sarah Turner, University of Otago, New Zealand

 

Globalization and the economic development of small states in the new millennium

Abdul Aziz Kaloko, University of Brunei

 

Re-defining regional development in Sri Lanka

M.M. Karunanayake and M.D.C. Abhayaratna, University of Sri Jayewardenepura, Sri Lanka

 

Is local development a new paradigm for development studies?

Sergio Conti and Paolo Giaccaria, University and Polytechnic, Italy

 

The role of small-scale entrepreneurs in changing Indonesian contexts

Stein Kristiansen, Agder University College, Norway

 

Globalisation and African agriculture

Marianne Nylandsted Larsen, Centre for Development Research, Denmark

 

4:00 – 4:30 pm

Tea Break (Foyer, AS7 Shaw Foundation Building, NUS)

 

4:30 – 6:00 pm

Session 4.11 Innovation, learning, and communities of practice II

(AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

Session 4.12 Economy and the environment II (AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

Session 4.13 Development geography II

 (AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

Chair: Bjørn Asheim, University of Oslo, Norway

 

Singapore's innovation system between local and global networks

Matthias Kiese, University of Hannover, Germany

 

Towards a learning-based theory of the cluster

Peter Maskell, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark

 

Technological variety, technological change, and the geography of production techniques

David Rigby and Jürgen Essletzbichler, University of California at Los Angeles, USA

 

Knowledge creation by new firms

Rolf Sternberg, University of Cologne, Germany

 

Chair: David P. Angel, Clark University, USA

 

 

Transnational corporations and voluntary environmental initiatives in Southeast Asia

Sanjeev Singh and Martin Perry, National University of Singapore

 

Agents of greening

Christian Schulz and Dietrich Soyez, University of Cologne, Germany

 

The impact of transnational environmental lobbying on industrial production systems

Dietrich Soyez, University of Cologne, Germany

 

The sustainability of the "geo" in economic geography

Iain Wallace, Carleton University, Canada

Chair: Fredrik Sjoholm, National University of Singapore

 

The role of small enterprises in the household and national economy in Sri-Lanka

Claes Lindberg, Shanta Wijesinghe and Ali B. Najib, Uppsala University, Sweden

 

NGOs, the state and donors in Bangladesh

Mokbul Morshed Ahmad, National University of Ireland

 

Promoting growth and development in South Africa's peripheral regions

Ben N. Mosiane, University of North-West, South Africa

 

How geography can contribute to a sustainable equitable planning-oriented development Francoise Orban-Ferauge, University of FUNDP, Belgium

 

 

6:15 – 7:00 pm

Plenary Session (Lecture Theatre 12, NUS)

Chair: Henry Yeung

Retheorizing economic geography: from commercial geography to the 'cultural turn’

Professor Trevor Barnes

University of British Columbia, Canada

 

7:00 – 8:00 pm

Economic Geography Reception (Foyer, Lecture Theatre 12, NUS)

 


8:30 – 10:00 am

Session 5.1 Geographies of international trade and investment I

(AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

Session 5.2 Labour Geographies I

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

Session 5.3 Development geography III

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

Chair: Henry Yeung, National University of Singapore

 

The changing locational behaviour of transnational corporations: Towards an explanation of the recent inward investment surge in the Republic of Ireland

Proinnsias Breathnach, National University of Ireland, Ireland

 

Mapping globalisation in the Asia-Pacific: IT sector linkages between Southeast Asia and the USA

Neil Coe, University of Manchester, UK

 

Restructuring in the European chocolate industry and effects in the cocoa producing countries

Niels Fold, Copenhagen University, Denmark

 

The global-local interplay of Samsung's FDI in Billingham, the Northeast of England, UK: Geographies of a floating plant

Sung-Hoon Jung, University of Sussex, UK

 

Chair: Philip S. Morrison, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand

 

Entrepreneurship and labor markets: Is an innovative Singapore possible?

Stephen J. Appold, National University of Singapore

 

Immigration and integration of labour in Vancouver, Canada

Harald Bauder, University of British Columbia, Canada

 

Expatriate labour in international financial centres: Evidence from New York city

Jonathan Beaverstock, Loughborough University, UK

 

Institutional barriers and migrants in the chinese urban labor market

Kam Wing Chan, University of Washington, Seattle, USA

 

Chair: Michael Bradshaw, University of Leicester, UK

 

Kut (rotating credif fund) in the livelihood strategies of the urban households in Malaysia

Suriati Ghazali, Universiti Sains Malaysia

 

Private sector development in Vietnam: Ambiguous regulation and the emerging economic structure

Lotte Thomsen, Centre for Development Research, Copenhagen, Denmark

 

Whose ideas? Development charities talking, from the grassroots to the internet

Janet Townsend and Emma Mawdsley, Durham University, UK

 

Small scale entrepreneurs in Hanoi, Vietnam. Changing times, changing challenges

Sarah Turner, University of Otago, New Zealand

10:00 – 10:30 am

Tea Break (Foyer, AS7 Shaw Foundation Building, NUS)

 

 

 



10:30 – 12:30 pm

Session 5.4 Geographies of international trade and investment II

(AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

Session 5.5 Labour Geographies II

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

Chair: Neil Coe, University of Manchester, UK

 

TNCs, local business networks and the development of technology

Inge Ivarsson, Göteborg University, Sweden

 

EU-ASEAN trade policies

Erja Kettunen, Helsinki School of Economics, Finland

 

Multinational corporations in trouble – Hyundai Motor India and local settings

Yeong  Kim, Ohio University, USA

 

Change in Korean investment policy

Kristiina Korhonen, Helsinki School of Economics, Finland

 

Local effects of automotive industry globalisation: A study of Volvo automotive suppliers in Sweden

Anders Larsson, University of Göteborg, Sweden

 

Patterns of East Asian investments in Vietnam - A national regulative regime under pressure from the Asian crisis

Jakob Lindahl, Roskilde University, Denmark

Chair: Susan M. Roberts, University of Kentucky, USA

 

Labour market responses to foreign direct investment, disinvestment and reinvestment:

The case of the microelectronics industry in the north east of England, 1989-2000

Stuart Dawley, University of Newcastle, UK

 

NAFTA, lean production and autoworkers' unions: Reshaping the labour geography of the North American auto industry

John Holmes, Queen's University, Canada

 

A Place for locality in labour geographies? Globalisation, local labour control regimes, and locally-emergent properties

Andy Jonas, University of Hull, UK

 

Spaces of labour control in Southeast Asia

Philip F. Kelly, York University, Canada

 

Globalisation and governmentality: Creating a call centre labour force

Wendy Larner, University of Auckland, New Zealand

 

 

 

 

 

 




10:30 – 12:30 pm

Session 5.6 Geographies of global capitalism I

 (AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

Session 5.7 Rural and resource economies

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-06)

Chair: Alex Hughes, University of Newcastle, UK

 

Re-presenting mining multinationals in the Asia-Pacific

Glenn Banks, University of New South Wales, Australia

 

The globalization of industrial restructuring

Padraig Carmody, University of Vermont, USA

 

Markets and pre-capitalist exchange

George Curry, Curtin University of Technology, Australia

 

The spaces of economic crisis: Reconfiguring Marxian crisis theories in the time of Southeast Asia's economic reconfiguration

Jim Glassman, Syracuse University, USA

 

Economic globalization in the lesser developed world

Richard Grant, University of Miami, USA

 

Chair: Andrew Marton, University of Nottingham, UK

 

Business cycles and agricultural resource use

Ben Bradshaw, Simon Fraser University, Canada

 

Rural population change and roadnet accessibility: Spatial analysis of roadnet impact on migration processes in a rural, Swedish region 

Aake Forsstroem, Goteborg University, Sweden

 

Glocalization on the resource periphery: The remapping of British Columbia

Roger Hayter, Simon Fraser University, Canada

 

The effects of transport situation on rural mobility: A synchronic analaysis from villages in rural Java

Douglas C. Johnston, University of Canterbury, New Zealand

 

Ecotourism potency in Indonesia: Special case of Pulau Dua and Pulau Rambut

Lia Warlina and Endang Saraswati, University of Indonesia

 

Making our way through the woods: Small-scale forest-based enterprises in northern BC

Heather Myers, University of Northern BC, Canada

 

12:30 – 2:00 pm

Lunch (NUSS Guild House)

 

 

 

 

2:00 – 4:00 pm

Session 5.8 Geographies of international trade and investment III

(AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

Session 5.9 Labour Geographies III

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

Session 5.10 Geographies of global capitalism II (AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

Chair: Niels Fold, Copenhagen University, Denmark

 

Globalization and spatial restructuring of China's stated owned enterprises

Xiaojian Li, Henan University, China

 

Linking economic and cultural processes of globalization

Becky Mansfield, University of Oregon, USA

 

Global discourse, global strategy and the putative global tomato

Bill Pritchard, University of Sydney, Australia

 

Core-periphery trade for New Zealand apples

Michael M. Roche and Megan K.L. McKenna, Massey University, New Zealand

 

Foreign direct investments and regional effects: empirical evidence from Norway

Grete Rusten, Stig Erik Jakobsen and Torunn Kvinge, Foundation for Research in Economics and Business Administration, Norway

 

Globalisation within the Nordic pulp and paper industry

Bjørnar Sæther, University of Oslo, Norway

 

Chair: Philip F. Kelly, York University, Canada

 

Hong Kong's labour force under globalization: A case study of the textile and clothing industries

Becky P.Y. Loo, University of Hong Kong

 

Globalisation and the labour market

Ron Martin, University of Cambridge and Philip S. Morrison, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand

 

Zapping labor III: Three moments of restructuring in the American job market

Jamie Peck, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA

 

The "brain drain phenomenon": Skilled emigration from less-favoured regions in the European Union? a case study from Austria

Anita Poeckl, University of Vienna, Austria

 

Chair: Jim Glassman, Syracuse University, USA

 

Multi-stakeholder approaches to ethical trade: Towards new organisational geographies of global commodity chains

Alex Hughes, University of Newcastle, UK

 

The global food industry and the emergence of an export-oriented shrimp sector in Southeast Bangladesh

Robert J Pokrant, Curtin University of Technology, Australia and Peter Reeves, National University of Singapore

 

Capitalism, cities, and the production of symbolic forms

Allen J. Scott, University of California at Los Angeles, USA

 

Measuring economic globalization:  Spatial hierarchies and market topologies

Michael Shin, University of Miami, USA

 

Revisiting theories of East Asian capitalism: The case of Korean “sand castle” capitalism

Lai Si Tsui-Auch and Yong-Joo Lee, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

 

4:00 – 4:30 pm

Tea Break (Foyer, AS7 Shaw Foundation Building, NUS)

 

4:30 – 6:00 pm

Session 5.11 Geographies of international trade and investment IV

(AS7 Seminar Rooms A,B,C)

 

Session 5.12 Labour Geographies IV

(AS7 Seminar Room D)

 

Session 5.13 Culture and ethnicity in economic geography

(AS7 Seminar Room 01-01)

 

Chair: Bill Pritchard, University of Sydney, Australia

 

Constructing knowledges of 'emerging markets': Geographies and sociologies

James D. Sidaway and John R. Bryson, University of Birmingham, UK; Michael  Pryke, Open University, UK

 

Global markets - local competence? Internationalisation of the Norwegian petroleum industry

Eirik Vatne, Norwegian School and Economics and Business Administration, Norway

 

Why Japanese companies invest in Singapore?

Xu Gang, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

 

Trade and inequality

Michael Webber and Sally Weller, University of Melbourne, Australia

 

Chair: Jonathan Beaverstock, Loughborough University, UK

 

Geo-politics of outrage and action

Susan M. Roberts, University of Kentucky, USA

 

Australian labour and discursive representations of the spatiality of power

David Sadler, University of Durham, UK and Bob Fagan, Macquarie University, Australia

 

The chameleon state: Policy and strategies for governing home-based outwork in the Australian clothing industry

Elissa Sutherland, University of Newcastle, Australia

 

Innovative labor organizing strategies: Women in the food sector in South & Southeast Asia

Gisèle Yasmeen, University of British Columbia, Canada

Chair: Tim Bunnell, National University of Singapore

 

The emergence of a cross-border production system and its cultural dimension

Peter Dörrenbächer, Universitat des Saarlandes and Christian Schulz, University of Cologne, Germany

 

The geography of energy as geographies of power

Johannes Hamhaber, Universitaet zu Koeln, Germany

 

Ethnic identity and business solidarity: Chinese capitalism revisited  

You-tien Hsing, University of British Columbia, Canada

 

The city of spectacle, cultural capital and the politics of difference

Louise Johnson, Deakin University, Australia

 

 

6:15 – 7:30 pm

Antipode Roundtable: A Crisis of Economic Geography?

(Lecture Theatre 12, NUS)

Convenor: Jamie Peck, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA                     Chair: Henry Yeung, National University of Singapore

Panelists:  Meric S. Gertler, University of Toronto, Canada                             Gernot Grabher, University of Bonn, Germany

Phillip O'Neill, University of Newcastle, Australia                           Sam Ock Park, Seoul National University, South Korea

Jamie Peck, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA                       Susan M. Roberts, University of Kentucky, USA

 


LIST OF NON-PRESENTING PARTICIPANTS

 

Siew Hong Ang

Ministry of Education, Singapore

contact@moe.edu.sg

 

May Lun Chan

The Chinese High School, Singapore

 

TC Chang

National University of Singapore

geoctc@nus.edu.sg

 

Hang Fun Chee

Bedok View Sec. School, Singapore

 

David F. Evans

Middlesex University, UK

fergev@yahoo.com

 

Fakhruddin

A. M. U. Aligarh, India

ggt08am@amu.up.nic.in

 

Homer Galistan

St Andrew's Junior College, Singapore

ome@moe.edu.sg

 

Lay Hoon Goh

Ministry of Education, Singapore

contact@moe.edu.sg

 

Valerie Goh

Ministry of Education, Singapore

contact@moe.edu.sg

 

Hana Gwee

The Chinese High School, Singapore

hana@chs.edu.sg

 

 

Anne Haila

University of Helsinki, Finland

anne.haila@helsinki.fi

 

Tone Haraldsen

University of Oslo, Norway

tone.haraldsen@sgeo.uio.no

 

Martin Hess

University of Munich, Germany

Hess@bwl.uni-muenchen.de

 

Kong Chong Ho

National University of Singapore

sochokc@nus.edu.sg

 

Soh Tin Ho

Ministry of Education, Singapore

contact@moe.edu.sg

 

Shirlena Huang

National University of Singapore

geoslena@nus.edu.sg

 

Bridget Kearins

Flinders University, Australia

bridget.kearins@flinders.edu.au

 

Andrea Kilgour

University of Liverpool, UK

kilgour@liverpool.ac.uk

 

Lily Kong

National University of Singapore

geokongl@nus.edu.sg

 

Elmar Kulke

Humboldt University, Germany

elmar_kulke@rz.hu-berlin.de

 

Malarvizhi Hangen

Ministry of Education, Singapore

contact@moe.edu.sg

 

Vijyaya Rani Nadarajah

Ministry of Education, Singapore

contact@moe.edu.sg

 

Giok Link Ooi

National University of Singapore

giokling@pacific.net.sg

 

K. Raguraman

National University of Singapore

geokrk@nus.edu.sg

 

Regina Salvador

Universidade Nova De Lisboa, Portugal

regleo@mail.telepac.pt

 

Victor Savage

National University of Singapore

geosava@nus.edu.sg

 

Ravinder Sidhu

University of Queensland, Australia

s157242@student.uq.edu.au

 

Floor Smakman

Utrecht University, the Netherlands

f.smakman@geog.uu.nl

 

Alan Smart

University of Calgary, Canada

asmart@acs.ucalgary.ca

 

Josephine Smart

University of Calgary, Canada

smart@ucalgary.ca

 

Karen Lam

Victoria Junior College, Singapore

karenlw@mbox4.singnet.com.sg

 

Jenny Suat Meng Lim

Ministry of Education, Singapore

 

Nancy Tay

The Chinese High School, Singapore

 

Kelvin Tay

Ministry of Education, Singapore

 

Lily Tay

Hwa Chong Junior College, Singapore

lilytay@pacific.net.sg

 

Peggy Teo

National University of Singapore

geoteop@nus.edu.sg

 

William C. Van Unnikgebouw

Universiteit Utrecht

L.Van Grunsven@geog.uu.nl

 

David Wadley

University of Queensland, Australia

d.wadley@mailbox.UQ.edu.au

 

Shuang Yann Wong

National Institute of Education

sywong@nie.edu.sg

 

Brenda Yeoh

National University of Singapore

geoysa@nus.edu.sg

 

Henry Wai-chung Yeung

National University of Singapore

geoywc@nus.edu.sg


SESSION PARTICIPANT INDEX

 

Abhayaratna, M.D.C., 4.10

Ali B, Najib, 3.5

Allen, John, 3.2

Alvstam, Claes G., 3.3

Amin, Ash, Plenary Speaker

Angel, David P., 4.9; 4.12

Appold, Stephen J., 5.2

Argent, Neil, 4.2

Asheim, Bjorn, 4.8; 4.11

Austin, Ian, 4.3

Banks, Glenn, 5.5

Barnes, Trevor, Plenary Speaker

Bauder, Harald, 5.2

Baum, Scott, 3.1

Beaverstock, Jonathan, 5.2; 5.12

Beyers, William B., 3.3; 3.6

Bowen, John T., 3.6

Bradshaw, Michael, 4.6; 5.3

Bradshaw, Ben, 5.7

Breathnach, Proinnsias, 5.1

Bunnell, Timothy G., 4.8; 5.13

Cabus, Peter, 3.1

Carmody, Padraig, 5.6

Chan, Kam Wing, 5.2

Chang, TC, 4.1

Chua, Beng Huat, SJTG Lecture

Coe, Neil, 3.3; 5.1; 5.4

Conti, Sergio, 4.10

Corey, Kenneth E., 4.3

Crewe, Louise, 4.8

Curry, George, 5.6

Dahlstrom, Margareta, 3.3

Daniels, Peter, 3.3; 3.9

Dawley, Stuart, 5.5

Dewi, Susilowati, 3.1

Dörrenbächer, Peter, 5.13

Endang, Saraswati, 5.7

Eronen, Jarmo, 4.6

Fold, Niels, 5.1; 5.8

Forsstroem, Aake, 5.7

Fromhold

Eisebith, Martina, 3.1

Gerhard, Ulrike, 3.3

Gertler, Meric, 3.1; 4.8; Antipode Roundtable

Giaccaria, Paolo, 4.10

Gibson, Katherine, Antipode Lecture

Gillespie, Andrew, 4.3

Glassman, Jim, 5.1; 5.6

 

 

 

 

 

Grabher, Gernot, 3.6; Antipode Roundtable

Grant, Richard, 5.6

Green, Milford B., 4.2; 4.5

Grote, Michael H., 4.2

Hallencreutz, Daniel, 3.4

Hamhaber, Johannes, 5.13

Hamirdin B., Ithnin, 4.9

Han, Sun Sheng, 4.6

Hassink, Robert, 4.8

Hayter, Roger, 5.7

Hermelin, Brita, 3.1

Heys, Greg, 3.4

Hillier, Jean, 4.9

Holmes, John, 5.5

Hsing, You-tien, 5.13

Hsu, Jinn-yuh, 4.8

Huang, Shirlena, 3.7

Hughes, Alex, 5.6; 5.10

Hutton, Thomas A., 3.6

Ivarsson, Inge, 5.4

Jahan, Sarwar, 3.4

Johnson, Louise, 5.13

Johnston, Douglas C, 5.7

Jonas, Andy, 5.5

Jung, Sung-Hoon, 5.1

Kaloko, Abdul Aziz, 4.10

Karunanayake, M.M., 4.10

Kellerman, Aharon, 4.7

Kelly, Philip K., 3.2; 5.5; 5.9

Kettunen, Erja, 5.4

Kiese, Matthias, 4.11

Kim, Yeong, 5.4

Kinder, Sebastian, 3.6

Kitajima, Seiko, 4.5

Korhonen, Kristiina, 5.4

Kresl, Peter, 4.4; 4.4

Kristiansen, Stein, 4.10

Kuwatsuka, Kentaro, 3.6

Lagendiji, Arnoud, 3.4

Larner, Wendy, 5.5

Larsen, Marianne Nylandsted, 4.10

Larsson, Anders, 5.4

Law, Robin, 3.4

Le Heron, Richard, 3.5

Lee, Yong-Joo, 5.10

Leinbach, Thomas R, 3.6

Lever, William F., 4.4

Lewis, Robert, 3.8; 3.8

Leyshon, Andrew, 4.3; 4.7

Li, Xiaojian, 5.8

Lia, Warlina, 5.7

Lindahl, Jakob, 5.4

Lindberg, Clas, 4.13

Liu, Weidong, 3.2

Lo, Vivien, 4.2

Loo, Becky P.Y., 5.9

Majury, Niall, 4.2

Malecki, Edward J., 4.7

Mansfield, Becky, 5.8

Marton, Andrew, 3.5; 4.6; 5.7

Maskell, Peter, 4.8; 4.11

Maude, Alaric, 3.7

Mawdsley, Emma, 5.3

Mizuoka, Fujio, 3.2

Mokbul, Morshed Ahmad, 4.13

Morrison, Philip S., 5.2; 5.9

Mosiane, Ben N., 4.13

Mullineux, Andrew W., 4.5

Myers, Heather, 5.7

Ni, Pengfei, 4.4

Nijman, Jan, 4.1

Nooriah, Yusof, 3.6

Nordin, Urban, 3.7

O'Neill, Phillip, 4.2; 4.5; Antipode Roundtable

Oinas, Paivi, 3.4

Okada, Aya, 3.7

Olds, Kris, Plenary Chair; 3.9

Orban-Ferauge, Francoise, 4.13

Park, Donghyun, 4.1

Park, Sam Ock  , 3.5; Antipode Roundtable

Parthasarathy, Balaji, 3.5

Patchell, Jerry, 4.9

Peck, Jamie, 5.9; Antipode Lecture Chair; Antipode Roundtable

Phelps, Nick, 3.8

Pietala, Jorma, 4.1

Poeckl, Anita, 5.9

Pokrant, Robert J, 5.10

Pritchard, Bill, 5.8; 5.11

Ratna, Saraswati, 3.9

Reeves, Peter, 5.10

Rigby, David, 4.11

Rimmer, Peter, 3.4; 4.1

Roberts, Susan M., 5.5. 5.12; Antipode Roundtable

 

 

 

 

 

Roche, Michael, 5.8

Rusten, Grete, 5.8

Sadler, David, 5.12

Sæther, Bjørnar, 5.8

Salmon, Scott, 3.2

Sanjeev , Singh, 4.12

Schulz, Christian, 4.9; 4.12

Scott, Allen J., 5.10

Shen, Jianfa, 4.4

Shin, Michael, 5.10

Sidaway, James D, 5.11

Sjoberg, Orjan, 3.2

Sjoholm, Fredrik, 4.13

Sjoholt, Peter, 3.9

Smith, Richard, 3.9

Smith, Keith, 4.8

Soyez, Dietrich, 4.12

Spreitzhofer, Guenter, 3.4

Sternberg, Rolf, 4.11

Sugeng, Rahardjo, 3.9

Suriati, Ghazali, 5.3

Sutherland, Elissa, 5.12

Taylor, Mike, 4.6

Thomsen, Lotte, 5.3

Townsend, Anthony M, 4.4

Triarko, Nurlambang, 3.7

Tsui-Auch, Lai Si, 5.10

Turner, Sarah, 4.1; 5.3

Tykkylainen, Markku, 4.6

Vatne, Eirik, 5.11

Wallace, Iain, 4.12

Webber, Michael, 5.11

Webster, Chris, 4.4

Weller, Sally, 5.11

Wilson, Mark, 4.7

Winder, Gordon, 3.8

Wójcik, Dariusz, 4.5

Wrigley, Neil, 4.5

Xu, Gang, 5.11

Yasmeen, Gisele, 5.12

Yeung, Henry Wai chung, 3.5; Plenary Chair; 5.1; Antipode Roundtable Chair

Zeller, Christian, 3.8

Zhou, Yu, 4.6

Zook, Matthew, 4.5