* Apologies for cross-posting *

Call for Papers: RGS-IBG August 29 – September 1, 2017

Creating and Communicating Knowledge, Practices and Values: Exploring the 
Dynamics of Local Anchors and Trans-Local Communities

Sponsored by the Economic Geography Research Group

Organizers:
Taylor Brydges – Uppsala University
Brian J. Hracs – University of Southampton
Rhiannon Pugh – Uppsala University
Suntje Schmidt – Leibniz-Institute for Research on Society and Space / Humboldt 
University of Berlin

Economic geographers have long been interested in the links between 
local-global economic dynamics (e.g. Bathelt et al., 2004). Within this sphere 
of interest, focus has been given to so-called ‘local anchors’ as the nodes 
through which regional, national, or global relations and dynamics function and 
occur. Specific physical places may, for instance, serve as local anchors for 
social movements (e.g. the maker movement) (Toombs and Bardzell, 2014), 
trans-local scenes (e.g. in music) (Hauge and Hracs, 2010; Lange, 2007), global 
knowledge communities (e.g. communities of enthusiasts) (Brinks and Ibert, 
2015; Müller and Ibert, 2015) or global processes of value creation (Berthoin 
Antal et al., 2015; Pike, 2009; Power and Hauge, 2006). We indeed observe a 
wide spectrum of local anchors that help to disseminate ideas and knowledge, 
enable and encourage participation in specific practices (e.g. tinkering, 
designing, building), serve as (temporary) productions sites (e.g. local 
workshops for music) and facilitate curation and consumption (e.g. pop-up 
stores, record stores). Despite this conceptual variety, these anchors are 
physical spaces through which economic and social activities occur and that 
actors utilize for creating objects, artifacts and products and to generate and 
disseminate ideas, brands and values. These local spaces have also drawn the 
attention of policymakers striving to capitalize upon local-global dynamics. 
However, very often these spaces are regarded overly optimistically and lack a 
critical reflection as to how they actually contribute to social, cultural and 
/ or economic value creation.

This session aims to nuance our understanding of the interplay between ‘the 
global’ and ‘the local’ as well as ‘physical’ and ‘virtual’ spaces. We aim to 
explore the role of local anchors within local neighborhoods and scenes as well 
as trans-local scenes, communities and virtual networks. More specifically, the 
session aims to consider the diversity and specificity of local anchors which 
may comprise craft collectives, performance venues, records stores (Hracs and 
Jansson, 2016), coworking / maker/ hacker spaces / open creative labs (Merkel, 
2015; Schmidt et al., 2014; Schmidt et al., 2016), universities (Cooke, 2011) 
and knowledge production sites (Power and Malmberg, 2008). This session builds 
on our related session at the 2017 American Association of Geographers and 
welcomes either conceptually, empirically or methodologically focused papers 
which address the range of topics raised above or the more specific, yet not 
exhaustive, list of questions below:


  *   How can ‘anchors’ and the interplay between the local and the trans-local 
be conceptualized?
  *   How do anchors evolve? What are the factors that support the success or 
failure of anchors in particular locations??
  *   What is the role of local anchors in trans-local scenes and processes in 
terms of generating knowledge, new ideas, or the formation and evolution of 
movements and cultural scenes?
  *   Do anchors induce new uncertainties for their potential users or offer 
new forms of resilience by, for example, helping to adapt to new labor market 
requirements?
  *   Although anchors are often associated with positive connotations 
especially in terms of participation and openness, what does ‘open’ actually 
mean?
  *   How can we assess the socio-political value of these spaces and should 
policies be developed and implemented to foster and support local anchors?

If you are interested in presenting a paper in this session, please send your 
abstract (of 250 words) to Taylor Brydges 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) by 
Tuesday, January 31, 2017.

References:


Bathelt, H., Malmberg, A., Maskell, P., 2004. Clusters and knowledge: Local 
buzz, global pipelines and the progress of knowledge creation. Progress in 
Human Geography 28 (1), 31-56.

Berthoin Antal, A., Hutter, M., Stark, D., 2015. Moments of Valuation. 
Exploring Sites of Dissonance. Oxford Univ. Press, Oxford.

Brinks, V., Ibert, O., 2015. Mushrooming Entrepreneurship: The Dynamic 
Geography of Enthusiast-Driven Innovation. Geoforum 65 (October 2015), 363–373.

Cooke, P., 2011. Handbook of Regional Innovation and Growth. Edward Elgar 
Publishing, Cheltenham.

Hauge, A., Hracs, B.J., 2010. See the sound, hear the style: Collaborative 
linkages between indie musicians and fashion designers in local scenes. 
Industry & Innovation 17 (1), 113-129.

Hracs, B.J., Jansson, J., 2016. Only the Strategic Survive - Independent Record 
Shops in the Digital Age. (working paper).

Lange, B., 2007. Die Räume der Kreativszenen: Culturepreneurs und ihre Orte in 
Berlin transcript, Bielefeld.

Merkel, J., 2015. Coworking in the City. ephemera - theory & politics in 
organizations 15 (1), 121-139.

Müller, F.C., Ibert, O., 2015. (Re-)Sources of Innovation: Understanding and 
Comparing Time-Spatial Innovation Dynamics through the Lens of Communities of 
Practice. Geoforum 65 (October 2015), 338-350.

Pike, A., 2009. Geographies of brands and branding. Progress in Human Geography 
33 (5), 619-645.

Power, D., Hauge, A., 2006. No man’s brand – Brands, institutions, fashion and 
the economy. CiND research paper 2006: 3.

Power, D., Malmberg, A., 2008. The contribution of universities to innovation 
and economic development: in what sense a regional problem? Cambridge Journal 
of Regions, Economy and Society 1 (2), 233-245.

Schmidt, S., Brinks, V., Brinkhoff, S., 2014. Innovation and creativity labs in 
Berlin – Organizing temporary spatial configurations for innovations. 
Zeitschrift für Wirtschaftsgeographie 58 (4), 232 - 247.

Schmidt, S., Ibert, O., Kuebart, A., Kühn, J., 2016. Open Creative Labs: 
Typologisierung, Verbreitung und Entwicklungsbedingungen, Erkner: 
Leibniz-Institute for Research on Society and Space.

Toombs, A., Bardzell, S., 2014. Becoming Makers: Hackerspace Member Habits, 
Values, and Identities. Journal of Peer Production 5 (Shared Machine Shops), 1 
- 8.

Dr. Brian J. Hracs
Lecturer in Human Geography
Geography and Environment
University of Southampton
Web: http://www.southampton.ac.uk/geography/about/staff/bjh1y13.page?
Web: https://brian-hracs.squarespace.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/brian_hracs

New Book: The Production and Consumption of Music in the Digital 
Age<https://www.routledge.com/The-Production-and-Consumption-of-Music-in-the-Digital-Age/Hracs-Seman-Virani/p/book/9781138851658>

AHRC Funded Project: Understanding and Supporting Creative Economies in 
Africa<http://www.creative-economy-africa.org.uk>


[cid:[email protected]]

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