Digital Economy

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A01=Bruno Moriset
A01=Edward J. Malecki
Ar St
Author_Bruno Moriset
Author_Edward J. Malecki
Business Process
Call Centers
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centers
city
Digital Cities
Digital Divide
Digital Economy
digital infrastructure disparities
divide
economic geography
Electron IC
Energy Savings
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global value chains
GPTs
Human Development Index
IBM Global Service
information society
International Telecommunications Union
Le Ba
Lone Eagles
networked organisations
Nomadic Work
offshoring
practices
regional impacts of digital transformation
self-employed
Self-employed Teleworkers
service
shared
Silicon Valley Model
Silicon Valleys
SSCs
Telework Center
teleworkers
TRODUCT Ion
urban innovation ecosystems
urbanism
Van Welsum
Venture Capital
Virtual Call Center
VMT Reduction

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415396967
  • Weight: 550g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Dec 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Information technologies (IT) shape economic space, but we have no clear map of the cyber economy since the "digital revolution" began in the early 1970s.

The Digital Economy offers an up-to-date, critical synthesis that links the various aspects of the digital or cyber economy from the perspective of real firms. A geographic approach emphasizes how IT has made businesses less dependent on locational constraints, and the tangible effects on places and regions are placed at the core of the analysis. Case studies of companies, including Amazon, Dell, Li & Fung, and Volvo, demonstrate that the geography of digitally-driven production is the outcome of both dispersion and agglomeration dynamics. Global corporations are shown to have footprints that ignore – to some degree – distance and time, yet creative and coordinating activities remain anchored in urban innovative ecosystems such as Silicon Valley and Bangalore. These trends have been made possible by the development of a worldwide and integrated telecommunications network, whose unequal presence dictates the capabilities of places and communities to be connected to the global economy. However, the threat of the digital divide must not be overstated. In cities, rural areas, and emerging countries, local development is wrapped up in human capital, rather than technology.

This engaging and accessible text describes and explains the patterns and dynamics of today’s digital economic space. The effects on places and regions and the people in them are at the core of the authors’ analysis, illustrated by many real examples. This book will be useful to anyone studying business and management, geography and information and communication studies.

Edward J. Malecki is Professor of Geography at The Ohio State University. He is author of over 100 published papers, and of Technology and Economic Development (Addison-Wesley Longman, 1997) and Associate Editor of Entrepreneurship and Regional Development.

Bruno Moriset is Associate Professor and Research Director in the department of Geography and Planning at the University of Lyon - Jean Moulin in France. His research focuses notably on the link between information technologies and regional development.

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