The Dictionary of Human Geography

(nextflipdebug2) #1

Comp. by: LElumalai Stage : Revises1 ChapterID: 9781405132879_4_C Date:31/3/09
Time:21:45:55 Filepath://ppdys1108/BlackwellCup/00_Blackwell/00_3B2/Gregory-
9781405132879/appln/3B2/revises/9781405132879_4_C.3d


Evidence for individual nations shows that
this prediction does not necessarily hold true.
For example, regional incomes in the USA
show steady convergence from the latter part
of the nineteenth century up to the 1970s.
However, individual regions had their own
trajectory, reflecting their historical experience
of greater or lesser movement towards the
national average income, which complicates a
simple picture of regular convergence. In add-
ition, the convergence thesis depends on the
geographicalscaleadopted: the trend towards
reduced inequality at a broad regional scale
can be contradicted more locally; for example,
betweencore and peripheryand within the
city. Thus in the USA convergence at a broad
regional scale has been accompanied by local
divergence between city and countryside and
amongneighbourhoods.
Regional convergence is not confined to
capitalist economies and, indeed, may be
more marked under asocialistsystem that
has the equalization of regional living stand-
ards as an explicit objective. For example, a
strong convergence tendency could be
observed among the republics of the former
Soviet Union, although this may have been
reversed during the so-called ‘era of stagna-
tion’ that precededperestroikaand the eventual
collapse ofcommunism.
There is evidence also of reversals of conver-
gence in the capitalist world, including the
USA, with inter-regional inequality increasing
since the 1970s. In the UK, divergence can be
observed among regions since the early 1980s,
in GDP per capita and other measures of
income. The fact that this has ocurred during
an era of dedication to the freemarketsuggests
limits to the extent of regional convergence
towards perfect equality under capitalism,
in practice if not in theory. Indeed, the earlier
era of more positive regionalplanningmay
have taken the country further in the direction
ofequalitythan would have been the case
under less restrained market forces. This sug-
gests that, after a certain level in the conver-
gence process has been reached, state
intervention in the form ofregional policyis
a necessary if not sufficient condition for fur-
ther convergence. dms

Suggested reading
Caselli and Coleman (2001); Martin (2001a);
Sokol (2001); Williamson (1966).

co-operative An enterprise formed by an
association of members with the aim of pro-
moting their common economic interests.

Historically, co-operatives have formed to
enhance the selling power of independent,
family-based producers; thus they have been
most prevalent in thefarmingsector (Moran,
Blundern and Bradley, 1996). Sellers’ co-
operatives sharemarketand pricing informa-
tion, and may act as a single seller to secure
better prices. The co-operative form has also
been used to enhance purchasing power
(bulk purchases) and to share the costs of
food processing. In recent years, producer co-
operatives have formed hand in glove withfair
tradeinitiatives to improve the working condi-
tions and income of peasant producers. jgu

Suggested reading
Cobia (1989).

core^periphery model A model of system-
atic patterns of uneven development in
the geography of human activity, based on
uneven distribution of power within and
between societies. Cores and peripheries can
be analysed at a variety of geographicscales,
including uneven regional development within
national economies and uneven development
at a global scale.
The development of cores and peripheries
within nationaleconomieswas a topic of con-
siderable concern to national development
planners and urban and regional geographers
in the early post-Second World War period.
Particularly in developing countries, unbal-
anced growth between dominant, typically
highly primate, urban centres and agrarian
regions of the country led to a variety of exer-
cises in promoting regional and secondary city
development (seedual economy). However,
the strength of existing economic cores and
the failure of many decentralization projects
has led in recent decades to less enthusiasm
for state policies that attempt to overcome
core–periphery structures at a national level,
while uneven development is increasingly seen
as central to the dynamics of capitalism
(Smith, 2008 [1984]).
The notion of cores and peripheries at a
global scale is associated with the work of a
variety ofdevelopmenteconomists, but has
been an especially pronounced feature of
approaches such as dependency theory
(Frank, 1967) andworld-systems analysis
(Wallerstein, 1979). Assessments of core–
periphery dynamics at a global scale have typ-
ically taken national states and economies as
important constituents of the global system,
and have thus identified somestatesas being
part of the global core and others as part of the

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_C Final Proof page 115 31.3.2009 9:45pm

CORE–PERIPHERY MODEL
Free download pdf