No 2021/7 Advancing the Treatment of Human Agency in the Analysis of Regional Economic Development

Illustrated with Three Norwegian Cases

Authors

  • Markus Grillitsch
  • Bjørn Asheim
  • Arne Isaksen
  • Hjalti Nielsen

Keywords:

human agency, regional development, structural transformation

Abstract

Human agency has become a core topic in economic geography complementing traditional, structural approaches to explain regional development. This paper contributes firstly with a discussion of the theoretical and conceptual relationships between the agency of individuals, organizations, and systems. Secondly, it proposes a novel analytical framework for studying how human agency, combined with external changes affects regional economic development, and how regional structural preconditions and external changes explain the activation of change agency. Thirdly, the relevance of the framework is examined through comparative studies of about 20 years of industrial development in three Norwegian regions. This illuminates the importance of human agency in regional transformation processes, how regional preconditions influence but not determine the activation of change agency, as well as why and how regional policy plays a role in the emergence of change agency. Yet, future research needs to investigate the context conditions, which promote or hinder the activation of change agency, to trace changes in economic activities over time and link it to causal mechanisms, and to pay attention to the unintended consequences of change agency in the longer-term.

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Published

2021-08-09

Issue

Section

Working papers