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Progress in Human Geography
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Networks of value, commodities and regions: Reworking divisions of labour in macro-regional economies

Adrian Smith

Department of Geography, University of Southampton, Highfield, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK

Al Rainnie

Department of Management, Monash University, Caulfield, Victoria 3145, Australia

Mick Dunford

School of European Studies, University of Sussex, Brighton BN1 9SN, UK

Jane Hardy

Business School, University of Hertfordshire, Hertford FG13 8QF, UK

Ray Hudson

David Sadler

Department of Geography, University of Durham, Durham, UK

The aim of this paper is to explore a theoretical framework that can assist in under-standing the extent to which the increased integration of macro-regional economies (such as the European and North American) and the global economy is leading to divergence and/or convergence in the pattern of economic activity and the distribution of value-added and wealth. In particular, the paper focuses on the extent to which changing divisions of labour, the production, appropriation and allocation of value, and economic organization underpin these processes of convergence/divergence. We focus on developing an understanding of the changing divisions of labour across space in increasingly integrated macro-regional economies such as Europe and North America, and the (unequal) flows of value between places that underpin mosaics of territorial inequality. We argue that the production and flows of value associated with different forms of economic activities and commodity production and exchange in different localities provides a framework for understanding changing geographical divisions of labour. We also argue that a critical engagement with the range of work associated with analysing ‘commodity chains’ and ‘commodity networks’ provides a way into thinking about the (dis)organization of economic activity and value creation, appropriation and distribution. In particular, we argue that the focus on the commodity, while initially helpful, is misplaced because commodities embody and carry with them relations of value. Consequently, our attention should be focused on the organization of the production, appropriation and realization of value flows and the various forces that structure these processes, such as state governance, labour organization, corporate practices and so on, that are fundamental to understanding the (re)configuration of economic activity in macro-regional economies.

Key Words: global commodity chains • globalization • networks of value • regional economic integration • territorial development • the state and labour

Progress in Human Geography, Vol. 26, No. 1, 41-63 (2002)
DOI: 10.1191/0309132502ph355ra


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