1.
Coe, Neil M. & Jones, Andrew M. The economic geography of the UK. (SAGE, 2010).
2.
Dorling, Danny. So you think you know about Britain? (Constable, 2011).
3.
Dorling, Daniel. Injustice: why social inequality persists. (Policy Press, 2010).
4.
Dorling, Daniel. Human geography of the UK. (SAGE, 2005).
5.
Thomas, Bethan & Dorling, Daniel. Identity in Britain: a cradle-to-grave atlas. (Policy, 2007).
6.
Hardill, Irene, Graham, David T., & Kofman, Eleonore. Human geography of the UK: an introduction. (Routledge, 2001).
7.
Dorling, D. & Allsopp, G. Human geography of the UK. (SAGE, 2005).
8.
Reich, Robert B. The future of success. (Vintage, 2002).
9.
Hutton, Will. The State we’re in. (Jonathan Cape, 1995).
10.
Leunig, T. & Swaffield, J. Cities Unlimited: Making Urban Regeneration Work. (2008).
11.
Coe, Neil M. & Jones, Andrew M. The economic geography of the UK. (SAGE, 2010).
12.
Mohan, John. A United Kingdom?: economic, social and political geographies. (Oxford University Press, 1999).
13.
Dorling, Daniel. Human geography of the UK. (SAGE, 2005).
14.
Gardiner, V., Matthews, M. H., Johnston, R. J., & Institute of British Geographers. The changing geography of the United Kingdom. (Routledge, 2000).
15.
Gardiner, V. & Matthews, M. H. The changing geography of the United Kingdom. (Routledge, 1999).
16.
Hardill, Irene, Graham, David T., & Kofman, Eleonore. Human geography of the UK: an introduction. (Routledge, 2001).
17.
Cloke, Paul J. Policy and change in Thatcher’s Britain. (Pergamon, 1992).
18.
Hudson, Ray & Williams, Allan M. Divided Britain. (John Wiley, 1995).
19.
Lewis, J. R. & Townsend, Alan R. The North-south divide: regional change in Britain in the 1980s. (P. Chapman, 1989).
20.
Townsend, Alan R. Uneven regional change in Britain. (Cambridge University Press, 1993).
21.
Coe, Neil M. & Jones, Andrew M. The economic geography of the UK. (SAGE, 2010).
22.
Martin, Ron & Bowthorn, Bob. The Geography of de-industrialisation. vol. Critical human geography (Macmillan, 1986).
23.
Townroe, P. M. & Martin, Ron. Regional development in the 1990s: the British Isles in transition. vol. Regional Policy&Development Series (J. Kingsley Publrs, 1992).
24.
Hudson, Ray. Wrecking a region: state policies, party politics and regional change in north east England. vol. Studies in society and space (Pion, 1989).
25.
Hudson, Raymond. Producing places. vol. Perspectives on economic change (Guilford Press, 2001).
26.
Brinkley, I. Defnining the Knowledge Economy. (2006).
27.
Cooke, P. N. Knowledge economies: clusters, learning and co-operative advantage. (Routledge, 2001).
28.
Cooke, P. & Piccaluga, Andrea. Regional economies as knowledge laboratories. (Edward Elgar, 2004).
29.
Florida, R. Toward the learning region. Futures 27, 527–536 (1995).
30.
Reich, Robert B. The future of success. (Vintage, 2002).
31.
Daniels, P. W. & Bryson, J. R. Manufacturing Services and Servicing Manufacturing: Knowledge-based Cities and Changing Forms of Production. Urban Studies 39, 977–991 (2002).
32.
May, C. Trouble in E-topia: Knowledge as Intellectual Property. Urban Studies 39, 1037–1049 (2002).
33.
Coe, Neil M. & Jones, Andrew M. The economic geography of the UK. (SAGE, 2010).
34.
Marshall, J. N. & Wood, Peter A. Services and space: key aspects of urban and regional development. (Longman Scientific and Technical, 1995).
35.
Wood, P. A service-informed approach to regional innovation – or adaptation? The Service Industries Journal 25, 429–445 (2005).
36.
Hall, Peter Geoffrey & Pain, Kathy. The polycentric metropolis: learning from mega-city regions in Europe. (Earthscan, 2006).
37.
Bryson, J. R., Daniels, P. W., & Warf, Barney. Service worlds: people, organisations and technologies. (Routledge, 2004).
38.
Cooke, P. N. Knowledge economies: clusters, learning and co-operative advantage. (Routledge, 2001).
39.
Brinkley, I. Defnining the Knowledge Economy. (2006).
40.
Bryson, John R. Knowledge, space, economy. (Routledge, 2000).
41.
Coe, Neil M. & Jones, Andrew M. The economic geography of the UK. (SAGE, 2010).
42.
Mohan, John. A United Kingdom?: economic, social and political geographies. (Oxford University Press, 1999).
43.
Corbridge, Stuart, Martin, Ron, & Thrift, Nigel J. Money, power and space. (Blackwell, 1994).
44.
Martin, Ron. Money and the space economy. (John Wiley, 1998).
45.
Leyshon, Andrew & Thrift, Nigel J. Money / space: geographies of monetary transformation. vol. International library of sociology (Routledge, 1997).
46.
Bryson, John R. Knowledge, space, economy. (Routledge, 2000).
47.
Laulajainen, Risto. Financial geography: a banker’s view. vol. Routledge international studies in money and banking (Routledge, 2003).
48.
Clark, G. L. MONEY FLOWS LIKE MERCURY: THE GEOGRAPHY OF GLOBAL FINANCE. Geografiska Annaler, Series B: Human Geography 87, 99–112 (2005).
49.
Clark, G. L. London in the European financial services industry: locational advantage and product complementarities. Journal of Economic Geography 2, 433–453 (2002).
50.
Richardson, R., Belt, V. & Marshall, N. Taking Calls to Newcastle: The Regional Implications of the Growth in Call Centres. Regional Studies 34, 357–369 (2000).
51.
Richardson, R. & Belt, V. Saved by the Bell? Call Centres and Economic Development in Less Favoured Regions. Economic and Industrial Democracy 22, 67–98 (2001).
52.
Bristow, G., Munday, M. & Gripaios, P. Call centre growth and location: corporate strategy ;and the spatial division of labour. Environment and Planning A 32, 519–538 (2000).
53.
Richardson, R. & Gillespie, A. The Call of the Wild: Call Centers and Economic Development in Rural Areas. Growth and Change 34, 87–108 (2003).
54.
Taylor, P. & Bain, P. ‘An assembly line in the head’: work and employee relations in the call centre. Industrial Relations Journal 30, 101–117 (1999).
55.
Hyman, J., Baldry, C., Scholarios, D. & Bunzel, D. Work-Life Imbalance in Call Centres and Software Development. British Journal of Industrial Relations 41, 215–239 (2003).
56.
Belt, V. A female ghetto? Women’s careers in call centres. Human Resource Management Journal 12, 51–66 (2002).
57.
Hardill, Irene, Graham, David T., & Kofman, Eleonore. Human geography of the UK: an introduction. (Routledge, 2001).
58.
Bryson, J. R. The economic geography reader: producing and consuming global capitalism. (Wiley, 1999).
59.
Gardiner, V. & Matthews, M. H. The changing geography of the United Kingdom. (Routledge, 1999).
60.
Gardiner, V., Matthews, M. H., Johnston, R. J., & Institute of British Geographers. The changing geography of the United Kingdom. (Routledge, 2000).
61.
Coe, Neil M. & Jones, Andrew M. The economic geography of the UK. (SAGE, 2010).
62.
Hamnett, Chris. Winners and losers: home ownership in modern Britain. (U.C.L. Press, 1998).
63.
Hamnett, C. Spatially Displaced Demand and the Changing Geography of House Prices in London, 1995–2006. Housing Studies 24, 301–320 (2009).
64.
Chamberlin, G. The housing market and household balance sheets. Economic & Labour Market Review 3, 24–33 (2009).
65.
Leyshon, A. & French, S. ‘We All Live in a Robbie Fowler House’: The Geographies of the Buy to Let Market in the UK. British Journal of Politics & International Relations 11, 438–460 (2009).
66.
French, S., Leyshon, A. & Signoretta, P. ‘All Gone Now’: The Material, Discursive and Political Erasure of Bank and Building Society Branches in Britain. Antipode 40, 79–101 (2008).
67.
Leyshon, A., French, S. & Signoretta, P. Financial exclusion and the geography of bank and building society branch closure in Britain. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 33, 447–465 (2008).
68.
Leyshon, A., Signoretta, P., Knights, D., Alferoff, C. & Burton, D. Walking with moneylenders: The ecology of the UK home-collected credit industry. Urban Studies 43, 161–186 (2006).
69.
Marshall, J. N., Willis, R., Coombes, M., Raybould, S. & Richardson, R. Mutuality, De-Mutualization and Communities: The Implications of Branch Network Rationalization in the British Building Society Industry. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 25, 355–378 (2000).
70.
McKay, S., Kempson, E., Atkinson, A. & Crame, M. Debt and Older People: How Age affects Attitudes to Borrowing. (2008).
71.
Kempson, E. & Atkinson, A. Overstretched: People at risk of financial difficulties. (2006).
72.
Kempson, E. Over-indebtedness in Britain. (2002).
73.
French, S., Leyshon, A. & Thrift, N. A very geographical crisis: the making and breaking of the 2007-2008 financial crisis. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 2, 287–302 (2009).
74.
French, S. & Leyshon, A. ‘These f@#king guys’: the terrible waste of a good crisis. Environment and Planning A 42, 2549–2559 (2010).
75.
Harvey, D. Crises of Capitalism - RSA Animate.
76.
Dickens, R. New Labour and the labour market. Oxford Review of Economic Policy 16, 95–113 (2000).
77.
Beatty, C. & Fothergill, S. Labour Market Adjustment in Areas of Chronic Industrial Decline: The Case of the UK Coalfields. Regional Studies 30, 627–640 (1996).
78.
Beatty, C., Fothergill, S. & Macmillan, R. A Theory of Employment, Unemployment and Sickness. Regional Studies 34, 617–630 (2000).
79.
Bryson, J. R., Daniels, P. W., & Warf, Barney. Service worlds: people, organisations and technologies. (Routledge, 2004).
80.
McDowell, L. Life without Father and Ford: The New Gender Order of Post-Fordism. Transactions of tthe Insitute of British Geographers (New Series) 16, 400–419.
81.
McDowell, L. Father and Ford revisited: gender, class and employment change in the new millennium. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 26, 448–464 (2001).
82.
McDowell, Linda. Redundant masculinities?: employment change and white working class youth. (Blackwell, 2003).
83.
McDowell, L. The Trouble with Men? Young People, Gender Transformations and the Crisis of Masculinity. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 24, 201–209 (2000).
84.
Lindsay, C. & McQuaid, R. W. Avoiding the ‘McJobs’: Unemployed Job Seekers and Attitudes to Service Work. Work, Employment & Society 18, 297–319 (2004).
85.
Perrons, Diane. Gender divisions and working time in the new economy: changing patterns of work, care and public policy in Europe and North America. vol. Globalization and welfare (Edward Elgar, 2007).
86.
Daniels, P. W. Geographies of the new economy: critical reflections. vol. Regions and cities (Routledge, 2007).
87.
Perrons, D. Women and gender equity in employmet: patterns, progress and challenges. (2009).
88.
Lewis, Jane. Children, changing families and welfare states. (Edward Elgar, 2006).
89.
Simpson, R. Masculinity at Work: The Experiences of Men in Female Dominated Occupations. Work, Employment & Society 18, 349–368 (2004).
90.
Does gender trump money? Housework hours of husbands and wives in Britain. Work, Employment & Society 22, 45–66 (2008).
91.
Coe, Neil M. & Jones, Andrew M. The economic geography of the UK. (SAGE, 2010).
92.
Gardiner, B., Martin, R., Sunley, P. & Tyler, P. Spatially unbalanced growth in the British economy. Journal of Economic Geography (2013) doi:10.1093/jeg/lbt003.
93.
Dorling, Daniel. Human geography of the UK. (SAGE, 2005).
94.
Henry, O. & Steve, G. Unequal Britain: How real are regional inequalities. CentrePiece.
95.
Tomaney, J. The Future of Regional Policy. (2009).
96.
Cities, C. for. Cities Outlook 2012. (2012).
97.
Martin, R. The political economy of Britain’s north-south divide. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 13, 389–418 (1988).
98.
Allen, J. & Massey, D. The Economy in question. vol. Restructuring Britain (Sage Publications in association with the Open University, 1988).
99.
Hudson, Ray & Williams, Allan M. Divided Britain. (John Wiley, 1995).
100.
Lewis, J. R. & Townsend, Alan R. The North-south divide: regional change in Britain in the 1980s. (P. Chapman, 1989).
101.
Baker, Alan R. H. & Billinge, Mark. Geographies of England: the North-South divide, material and imagined. vol. Cambridge studies in historical geography (Cambridge University Press, 2004).
102.
Coe, Neil M. & Jones, Andrew M. The economic geography of the UK. (SAGE, 2010).
103.
Fothergill, S. A new regional policy for Britain. Regional Studies 39, 659–667 (2005).
104.
Allen, J. & Cochrane, A. Beyond the Territorial Fix: Regional Assemblages, Politics and Power. Regional Studies 41, 1161–1175 (2007).
105.
Goodwin, M., Jones, M. & Jones, R. Devolution, constitutional change and economic development: Explaining and understanding the new institutional geographies of the British state. Regional Studies 39, 421–436 (2005).
106.
Harvey, D. From managerialism to entrepreneurialism: the transformation in urban governance in late capitalism. Geografiska Annaler 71, 3–17 (1989).
107.
Hudson, Ray. Wrecking a region: state policies, party politics and regional change in north east England. vol. Studies in society and space (Pion, 1989).
108.
Jessop, Bob. The future of the capitalist state. (Polity, 2002).
109.
Lee, Roger & Wills, Jane. Geographies of economies. (Arnold, 1997).
110.
Martin, R. The political economy of Britain’s north-south divide. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 13, 389–418 (1988).
111.
Mohan, John. A United Kingdom?: economic, social and political geographies. (Oxford University Press, 1999).
112.
Pike, A. Post-devolution blues? Economic development in the Anglo-Scottish borders. Regional Studies 36, 1067–1082 (2002).
113.
Pike, A. & Tomaney, J. The state and uneven development: the governance of economic development in England in the post-devolution UK. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 2, 13–34 (2009).
114.
Imrie, Rob & Thomas, Huw. British urban policy: an evaluation of the urban development corporations. (SAGE, 1999).
115.
Atkinson, Rob & Moon, Graham. Urban policy in Britain: the city, the state and the market. (Macmillan P., 1994).
116.
Cochrane, Allan. Understanding urban policy: a critical approach. (Blackwell, 2007).
117.
Imrie, Rob & Raco, Mike. Urban renaissance?: New Labour, community and urban policy. (Policy, 2003).
118.
Hill, Dilys M. Urban policy and politics in Britain. vol. Contemporary political studies (Macmillan, 2000).
119.
The LEP Network - The LEP Network. http://www.lepnetwork.net.
120.
Enterprise Zones | Looking for a place to grow your business? http://enterprisezones.communities.gov.uk/.
121.
England’s Regional Development Agencies.
122.
One North East.
123.
County Durham Development Company.
124.
LDDC History Pages.
125.
Gardiner, B., Martin, R., Sunley, P. & Tyler, P. Spatially unbalanced growth in the British economy. Journal of Economic Geography (2013) doi:10.1093/jeg/lbt003.
126.
Beatty, C. & Fothergill, S. The prospects for worklessness in Britain’s weaker local economies. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 4, 401–417 (2011).
127.
Coe, Neil M. & Jones, Andrew M. The economic geography of the UK. (SAGE, 2010).
128.
French, S. & Leyshon, A. ‘These f@#king guys’: the terrible waste of a good crisis. Environment and Planning A 42, 2549–2559 (2010).
129.
French, S., Leyshon, A. & Thrift, N. A very geographical crisis: the making and breaking of the 2007-2008 financial crisis. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 2, 287–302 (2009).
130.
COE, N. M. & JONES, A. A new geography of the UK economy? Commentary on the publication of The economic geography of the UK. The Geographical Journal 177, 149–154 (2011).
131.
Martin, R. The local geographies of the financial crisis: from the housing bubble to economic recession and beyond. Journal of Economic Geography 11, 587–618 (2010).
132.
Marshall, J. N. et al. Placing the run on northern rock. Journal of Economic Geography 12, 157–181 (2011).
133.
MacLeavy, J. A ‘new politics’ of austerity, workfare and gender? The UK coalition government’s welfare reform proposals. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 4, 355–367 (2011).
134.
Overman, H., Gordon, I., Jones, A. & McRae, H. How did London Get Away With it? The Recession and the North-South Divide - Video and audio - News and media - Home. (2011).
135.
Cities, C. for. Cities Outlook 2012. (2012).
136.
Elliot, L. Britain’s Broken Economy - and how to fix it. (2010).
137.
Vaitilingham, R. Recovery Britain: Research Evidence to Underpin a Productive, Fair and Sustainable Return to Growth. http://www.esrc.ac.uk/files/news-events-and-publications/publications/themed-publications/recovery-britain/ (2011).
138.
Centre for Cities.
139.
The Smith Institute.
140.
Policy Exchange.
141.
The Centre for Social Justice.
142.
IPPR - Institute for Public Policy Research.
143.
MacKinnon, D. & Derickson, K. D. From resilience to resourcefulness: A critique of resilience policy and activism. Progress in Human Geography 37, 253–270 (2013).
144.
Adger, W. N. Social and ecological resilience: are they related? Progress in Human Geography 24, 347–364 (2000).
145.
Pike, A., Dawley, S. & Tomaney, J. Resilience, adaptation and adaptability. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 3, 59–70 (2010).
146.
Dawley, S., Pike, A. & Tomaney, J. Towards the Resilient Region? Local Economy 25, 650–667 (2010).
147.
Christopherson, S., Michie, J. & Tyler, P. Regional resilience: theoretical and empirical perspectives. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 3, 3–10 (2010).
148.
Jonas, A. E. G. Region and place: Regionalism in question. Progress in Human Geography 36, 263–272 (2012).
149.
Hudson, R. Resilient regions in an uncertain world: wishful thinking or a practical reality? Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 3, 11–25 (2010).
150.
Martin, R. Regional economic resilience, hysteresis and recessionary shocks. Journal of Economic Geography 12, 1–32 (2012).
151.
Yamamoto, D. Regional Resilience: Prospects for Regional Development Research. Geography Compass 5, 723–736 (2011).
152.
Shaw, K. & Maythorne, L. Managing for local resilience: towards a strategic approach. Public Policy and Administration 28, 43–65 (2013).
153.
Hudson, Ray. Wrecking a region: state policies, party politics and regional change in north east England. vol. Studies in society and space (Pion, 1989).
154.
BBC News 18 December 2011 - Transport spending heavily skewed towards London. (2011).
155.
Cities, C. for. Cities Outlook 2012. (2012).