《The world city network: Evaluating top-down versus bottom-up approaches》

打印
作者
来源
CITIES,Vol.72,IssueB,P.287-294
语言
英文
关键字
World city network; Germany; Interlocking network model; Scale; Knowledge economy; PRODUCER SERVICE FIRMS; GLOBAL MEDIA CITIES; KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY; CHINESE CITIES; VALUE CHAIN; CONNECTIVITY; MODEL; GEOGRAPHY; REGIONS; PERSPECTIVES
作者单位
[Luthi, Stefan] Lucerne Univ Appl Sci & Arts, Inst Management & Reg Econ IBR, Zent Str 9, CH-6002 Luzern, Switzerland. [Thierstein, Alain] Tech Univ Munich, Inst Urban Dev, Fac Architecture, Arcisstr 21, D-80333 Munich, Germany. [Hoyler, Michael] Loughborough Univ Technol, Dept Geog, Loughborough LE11 3TU, Leics, England. Luthi, S (reprint author), Lucerne Univ Appl Sci & Arts, Inst Management & Reg Econ IBR, Zent Str 9, CH-6002 Luzern, Switzerland. E-Mail: stefan.luethi@hslu.ch
摘要
The growth of the knowledge economy has led to new forms of business networks linking cities and towns across different spatial scales. Various attempts have been made to analyse these networks empirically using the interlocking network model of the Globalization and World Cities (GaWC) research network. Two approaches can be distinguished from a spatial perspective: a global 'top-down' approach that studies the world city network from the perspective of the largest advanced producer service firms, and a macro-regional 'bottom-up' approach that starts with the most important knowledge-intensive firms located within specific territorial boundaries. This paper compares and critically assesses the methodological implications and empirical outcomes of both approaches with reference to case studies of the German space economy. Both approaches pursue similar objectives: to investigate external relations of cities, both transnationally and on the national scale. Differences exist in the theoretical argumentation: the top-down approach is grounded in world city research; the bottom-up approach is anchored in debates in regional science and economic geography. In this paper, we argue for the need of scale-sensitive interpretations of connectivity patterns resulting from different approaches to the interlocking network model and conclude with some tentative recommendations for the methodological direction of future research in world city network studies.