Who makes the city? The evolution of Galway city

Author:

Collins Patrick1

Affiliation:

1. School of Geography, Archaeology and Irish Studies , NUI Galway, Ireland

Abstract

Abstract This paper sets out to better understand the roles of various actors and actions in the ‘making’ of Galway city. From the formation of the state, with a population of just over 14,000, the city has enjoyed population growth rates above EU and Irish averages over the past three decades. This paper maps a series of growth phases resulting from sometimes deliberate and other times non-deliberate policy decisions. The theoretical lens adopted is that of evolutionary economic geography. This is an attempt to counteract the tendency in broader social science research to underplay geographical aspects, such as places, space and scales. Economic geography – and evolutionary economic geography in particular – better identifies the complexity and nuance of place development. Theorists such as Boschma (2017) and Martin & Sunley (2015) consider development as a path-dependent process. Development is situated and place-based. This requires a more historically attuned perspective and a recognition that the role played by institutions, government and policy is vital. The paper concludes with a broad reflection on the role of spatial development policy and the potential future development of the city.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous),Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science

Reference41 articles.

1. AIRO (2015). All Island Research Observatory: Galway city. Retrieved from http://airo.maynoothuniversity.ie/external-content/galway-city [11 April 2020].

2. Araghi, F. (2012). The invisible hand and the visible foot: Peasants, dispossession and globalization. In A. H. Akram-Lodhi & C. Kay, Peasants and globalization (pp. 123–59). Oxfordshire: Routledge.

3. Barry, F. (2019). Ireland and the changing global foreign direct investment landscape. Administration, 67 (3), 93–110.

4. Boschma, R. (2017). Relatedness as driver of regional diversification: A research agenda. Regional Studies, 51 (3), 351–64.

5. Buchanan, C. (1968) Regional studies in Ireland. Dublin: An Foras Forbartha.

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