The Dictionary of Human Geography

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Journal of Regional Science, initiating inter-
national branches (Europe in 1961, Asia in
1963) and attracting attention from co-
gnate disciplines. One of those waseconomic
geography, and for a period in the 1960s –
the halcyon years of thequantitative revo-
lutionandspatial science– the agendas of
the two were symbiotically linked. The 1970s
began a reversal of fortunes, as former allies
such as economic geography increasingly
deserted regional science, its practitioners
caught up in the critique of spatial science,
the concomitant advance ofpolitical econ-
omythrough the sub-discipline, and the emer-
gence of an avowedlyradical geography.
From the 1990s, competitors for the same
intellectual (and artificial) turf cultivated by
regional science emerged, such as thenew
economic geography, and university admin-
istrators turned sour (Isard’s original Regional
Science Department at the University of
Pennsylvania was closed in 1994–5). Against
the backdrop of two decades of intellectual
and then institutional assault, regional science
moved to the margins ofhuman geography
and the social sciences more generally. tb

Suggested reading
Barnes (2004c).

regionalism A term referring to both a form
of politicalidentityand sub-national eco-
nomic integration. Attempts have been
made to clarify the definition to delineate the
‘old’ regionalism of a political identity seeking
autonomy or separation from thestate(see
secession) and the ‘new’ regionalism of eco-
nomic integration at the sub-national scale,
which may include governmental administra-
tive functions (Witt, 2005). Regionalism is
seen as a theoretical and methodological
vehicle to analyse new forms ofgovernance
within the context of neo-liberal policies (see
neo-liberalism) and supra-state institutions
(O’Loughlin, 1996). Further clarification is
provided by Jones and MacLeod (2004),
who distinguish between regional spaces and
spaces of regionalism. Regional spaces are
regional economic geographies of techno-
logical spillovers and inter-firmagglomer-
ationthat produce a regional clustering of
economic assets (cf.cluster).Spaces of region-
alismare the ‘(re)assertion of national and
regional claims to citizenship, insurgent forms
of political mobilization and cultural expres-
sion and the formation of new contours of
territorial government’ (Jones and MacLeod,
2004, p. 435).

As governments restructure under the pres-
sures of neo-liberalism and globalization,
the politics of regionalism often does not
distinguish between the regional economic
policies and regional political identity. As
Paasi (2003) has pointed out, there is an
important difference between the identity of
aregion, or the classification of a space by
government and other agencies, and the
regional consciousness of individuals, or the
degree and form of political regional attach-
ment. Recent identification of a ‘resurgence of
the regions’ refers to both the creation of
regional economic spaces attempting to cap-
ture global investment by touting a regional
comparative advantageas well as the polit-
ical movements, such as Lega Nord in Italy,
dissatisfied with membership in the existing
state. Jones and MacLeod (2004) caution
social scientists and policy-makers that there
is no necessary relationship between regional
economic spaces and regional political iden-
tity, which may cause problems for govern-
ments and the European Union promoting
regional policies. Furthermore, both regional
spaces and spaces of regionalism occur at
various scales, and must be viewed as a poli-
tical process involving conflict and negoti-
ation rather than fixed political geographical
entities. (See alsoregionalpolicy.) cf

Suggested reading
Allen, Massey and Cochrane (1998); Ho ̈nnigh-
ausen, Frey, Peacock and Steiner (2005).

regression A statistical relationship between
a dependent variable and one or more inde-
pendent variables. The standard technique for
regression analysis fits a straight-line trend
through a scatter of points (as shown in the
figure), with the line placed to minimize the
sum of the (squared) distances between it and
the individual points. In the formula for a
simple regression (i.e. with one independent
variable),
Y¼aþbXe,

Yis the dependent variable (shown on the
vertical axis);Xis the independent variable
(shown on the horizontal axis);ais theinter-
ceptorconstantterm (i.e. the value ofYwhen
Xequals zero);bis theregression coefficient(i.e.
the slope of the relationship, indicating the
change inYfor each unit change inX); ande
is the error term, indicating the degree of scat-
ter of points around the line. The closer the fit
of the line to all of the points, the larger the
associatedcorrelation.

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