Author:
Görmar Franziska,Harfst Jörn
Abstract
In recent decades, manufacturing industries in Europe have undergone a deep transformation due to global market competition, automation, and adaptation to globalized production patterns. The impact of deindustrialization and regional restructuring has been particularly strong on regions outside of metropolitan areas, which may be locked in their specific development path and cannot benefit from agglomeration effects. However, scholars are increasingly shifting their attention to processes of regional renewal, emphasizing the strengths and potentials of such regions. Such potentials holds the concept of Industrial Culture which is defined as a particular cultural setting made up of certain intangible assets, such as skills, attitudes, traditions, tangible monuments, and artefacts. Based on the case study of the district of Zwickau, the authors identify three dimensions of Industrial Culture. These cultural, social, and economic aspects can be underscored by different—albeit often overlapping—actions, opening up new development options for the region if embedded in a broad network of regional actors. Industrial Culture can thus be perceived as a strategic concept to form a coherent approach of regional development by integrating various existing activities in a region.
Reference56 articles.
1. Welcome to the post‐industrial society
2. The Rise of the Network Society, The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture;Castells,1996
3. Path Dependence and New Paths in Regional Evolution: In Search of the Role of Culture
4. Institutional Change, Cultural Transformation and Economic Regeneration: Myths and Realities from Europe’s Old Industrial Areas;Hudson,1992
5. Innovation and Urban Regions as National and International Nodes for the Transfer and Sharing of Knowledge
Cited by
23 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献