Papers in Regional Science Pages: 303-602 April 2021 |
ISSUE INFORMATION
Free Access
Pages: 303-304 | First Published: 06 April 2021
FULL ARTICLES
Spatial shift‐share analysis: Some new developments
Claudia V. Montanía, Miguel A. Márquez, Teresa Fernández‐Núñez, Geoffrey J.D. Hewings
Pages: 305-325 | First Published: 15 September 2020
Does EU regional policy promote local TFP growth? Evidence from the Italian Mezzogiorno
Giuseppe Albanese, Guido de Blasio, Andrea Locatelli
Pages: 327-348 | First Published: 02 September 2020
Collaboration networks, geography and innovation: Local and national embeddedness
Pablo Galaso, Jaromír Kovářík
Pages: 349-377 | First Published: 30 September 2020
Open Access
The contribution of statistical network models to the study of clusters and their evolution
Frans Hermans
Pages: 379-403 | First Published: 10 October 2020
Stefano Fusaro, Enrique López‐Bazo
Pages: 405-428 | First Published: 17 October 2020
Infant mortality in Turkey: Causes and effects in a regional context
Firat Bilgel
Pages: 429-453 | First Published: 19 September 2020
Open Access
Doubly constrained gravity models for interregional trade estimation
Mattia Cai
Pages: 455-474 | First Published: 30 October 2020
E‐commerce development and urban‐rural income gap: Evidence from Zhejiang Province, China
Lili Li, Yiwu Zeng, Zi Ye, Hongdong Guo
Pages: 475-494 | First Published: 26 August 2020
Tolerant or segregated? Immigration and electoral outcomes in urban areas
Carlo Devillanova
Pages: 495-515 | First Published: 03 November 2020
Renan Almeida, Marcelo Brandão, Ramon Torres, Pedro Patrício, Pedro Amaral
Pages: 517-559 | First Published: 31 August 2020
Juvenile curfew and crime reduction: Evidence from Brazil
Luís Carazza, Raul da Mota Silveira Neto, Lucas Emanuel
Pages: 561-579 | First Published: 01 September 2020
The natural resource curse: Evidence from the Colombian municipalities
Jhorland Ayala‐García, Sandy Dall'erba
Pages: 581-602 | First Published: 29 September 2020
The Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy in Rutgers University, New Brunswick, invites applications for the position of Executive Director of Urban and Public Policy Analytics and Health Informatics Program. This is a full-time non-tenured Associate Professor or Professor of Practice position in the School, for a period of three years, with the possibility of renewal, subject to availability of funding. Applicants with significant professional experience are encouraged to apply.
Rutgers New Brunswick is a Big 10 university and a member of AAU. The school has several highly ranked programs in the areas of city and regional planning, public policy, health administration, undergraduate public health, and related areas. A new academic area is Public Informatics, with a current focus on Urban Planning and Public Policy, and a degree focus on Urban Analytics, but with plans to expand to new areas over the next few years.
Our research centers are focused on transportation, workforce development, the built and natural environments, urban and civic informatics, survey research, and other areas. The school also has cross-cutting research clusters on Upstream Determinants of Health https://bloustein.rutgers.edu/centers/health-at-bloustein/ and the Future of Cities, Society, Work and Health. https://bloustein.rutgers.edu/centers/smart-civic-tech/
We seek to appoint a senior practitioner who will administer our current programs in the Informatics area, including the Master of Public Informatics, a Graduate Certificate in Urban and Public Informatics, and a soon-to-be offered online Master of Public Informatics, and to recruit students into and grow those programs. We further expect that working with other faculty, and instructional technology developers, the successful candidate will establish new academic programs, including online programs, certificate programs that are targeted to mid career professionals, as well as programs in new areas of specialization. Based on our Strategic Plan, expected areas of growth include Health Analytics and Public Policy Analytics, and related areas.
The candidate will teach graduate-level courses on some of the following topics: data science, machine learning, GIScience, and other analytics; programming; optimization techniques; network analysis; domain-specific technology and tools-oriented courses; project management; technology strategy; and support student projects and independent learning. The ideal candidate will extend the school’s already extensive government and industry engagement in the technology and analytics space, and will establish student internship and research programs in these areas.
All information at: https://jobs.rutgers.edu/postings/129020
Dear colleague,
The following message comes as a reminder of the call for abstracts for the 13th CITTA Conference, organized in partnership with research project BooST, on July 2nd, 2021, in virtual format. The deadline for abstract submission is April 9th, 2021. For the submission of abstracts please follow the instructions here.
Confirmed keynote speakers
This year we can expect stimulating contributions on cycling mobility, by Marco te Brömmelstroet, of the University of Amsterdam and on the 15-minute city, by Carlos Moreno, of the University of Paris Panthéon-Sorbonne (More information available here).
Conference Proceedings
Authors of approved abstracts will have an opportunity to submit a full-size paper to be published in the conference proceedings book. Submissions of papers are accepted until July 4th, 2021.
Best Student Paper Contest
All papers reflecting either in progress or concluded research by PhD and Masters students can participate in this conference’s Best Student Paper Contest (5000 word limit). Participants will be called to review other works in the scope of this contest and should expect to revise two papers. More information will be available on the website.
The conference comprises plenary sessions and parallel thematic sessions on the following topics:
1.Planning for the Bicycle: Supporting Human Scale Cities
2.Urban form and the environment: Human Scale Planning
3.Transformative Planning and Well-being: Human Scale Governance Arrangements
4.Transport Engineering and Planning: Human Scale Mobility Systems
Please do not hesitate to share this event with your colleagues and to contact us for further information!
Best regards,
Organizing committee
http://citta.fe.up.pt/
CITTA I Centro de Investigação do Território Transportes e Ambiente
FEUP I Faculty of engineering of the University of Porto
DEC I Department of Civil Engineering
Call for Papers and Special Session Proposals
The APDR invite regional scientists, economists, economic geographers, urban planners, policy makers, and researchers of related disciplines to participate in the 28th APDR Congress that will be held from 16 to 17 of September, 2021, University of Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro (UTAD), placed in Vila Real, in the Northeast of Portugal
Beyond the various themes related to regional science this congress will focus on the emerging topic of Green and inclusive transitions in Southern European regions: What can we do better?.
The call for papers and Special Session Proposals are open and your participation is very welcome!
Themes of specific interest are:
Deadline for Special Session proposals: June 14, 2021. Proposals should be sent by email to the secretariat of the Congress (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).
Deadline for Abstracts submissions: July 5, 2021. Authors should submit their abstracts through online submission system by following the link https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/APDR2021.
All information at the congress website: http://www.apdr.pt/congresso/2021
Looking forward to meeting you in Vila Real!
The Organizing Committee and the Board of APDR 28th APDR Congress
The Division of Public Policy (PPOL) seeks to recruit a new Post-doctoral Fellow/Research Associate with specialty in the broad areas of urban policy, including transportation, land use, economic development, housing, and social equity. Main tasks of the appointee include conducting research on a wide range of urban topics which will be determined by the faculty supervisor, assisting in supervising PhD and Master students in the team, and developing his/her own research agenda.
Applicants should have a recognized PhD degree in relevant discipline, including but not limited to, transportation engineering, urban planning, urban studies, regional science, geography, urban economics, and public policy. The successful applicant is expected to have strong analytical skills, sense of responsibility, responsiveness to fast-paced research environment, and excellent independent research ability. The candidate must have been well trained in quantitative research methodologies such as statistical analysis, big data analytics, machine learning and/or GIS. Familiarity with qualitative research methods is a plus. Interested candidates are encouraged to apply as soon as possible. (Duration: 1 year, with a possibility of 1-year renewal subject to performance and funding)
Salary is highly competitive and will be commensurate with qualifications and experience. Fringe benefits include annual leave, medical and dental benefits. Contract renewal will be subject to performance, funding availability and mutual agreement.
Please complete an online application form through the HKUST Careers website (https://hkustcareers.ust.hk) and return it online together with (a) a curriculum vitae; (b) a letter of intent describing their motivation, qualifications, skills and experience relevant to this position; (c) 2-5 writing samples (e.g., working papers, journal publications); and (d) 2-3 reference letters to the Human Resources Office on or before Friday, 16 April 2021.
For enquiries, please contact Dr. Pengyu ZHU (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).
You can view and apply for this job at:
THE NEW ISSUE OF REGIONAL STATISTICS IS ALREADY AVAILABLE!
We are pleased to inform you that a new issue of the Regional Statistics has been released and now it’s avaiable online.
http://www.ksh.hu/terstat_eng_current_issue
REGIONAL STATISTICS, 2021, VOL 11, No 2.
STUDIES
Tamás Sebestyén − Erik Braun − Zita Iloskics − Attila Varga: Spatial and institutional dimensions of research collaboration: a multidimensional profiling of European regions
http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2021/2021_02/rs110203.pdf
George Petrakos − Konstantinos Rontos − Chara Vavoura − Luca Salvati − Ioannis Vavouras: Political budget cycles and effects of the excessive deficit procedure: The case of Greece
http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2021/2021_02/rs110202.pdf
Kamran Jafarpour Ghalehteimouri − Ali Shamaei − Faizah Binti Che Ros: Effectiveness of spatial justice in sustainable development and classification of sustainability in Tehran province
http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2021/2021_02/rs110201.pdf
Foued Ben said: Recent tendency in Tunisian industrial firms’ location
http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2021/2021_02/rs110204.pdf
Sruthi Krishnan V − Mohammed Firoz C: Impact of land use and land cover change on the environmental quality of a region: A case of Ernakulam district in Kerala, India
http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2021/2021_02/rs110205.pdf
László Kökény − Kornélia Kiss: There is a time and a place for everything (and for everyone): Examining main socio-demographic and territorial differences in use of leisure time
http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2021/2021_02/rs110206.pdf
Imre Dobos − Gábor Michalkó − Péter Sasvári: The publication performance of Hungarian economics and management researchers: A comparison with the Visegrád 4 countries and Romania
http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2021/2021_02/rs110207.pdf
Márta Bakucz − Ilona Cserháti − Tibor Keresztély − Gábor Michalkó: An analysis of the major factors shaping the tourismrelated spending of senior citizens in Hungary
http://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2021/2021_02/rs110208.pdf
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RSPP Call for Papers
Special Issue on
Territorial dimensions of green and digital transitions
The European Green Deal (EGD) is a growth strategy aiming at transforming the European Union into a climate-neutral space by 2050. Aware of its major social side-effects, the EU is launching special funds to support the mitigation of expected inequalities generated by the green transition in order to keep it also a just transition. Accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic, the global digital transformation is envisaged as an enabler background for the green transition, despite the lack of consensus regarding the environmental footprint of this transformation (Itten et al., 2020). An effective coordination between green and digital transitions is currently seen as crucial to the European recovery, which must be based on principles such as solidarity, convergence and cohesion in order to be fair and inclusive. The topicality of the theme is evident in the motto for the current Presidency of the Council of the European Union: “for a fair, green and digital recovery” (2021PORTUGAL.EU, 2021).
Studies on sustainable transitions contribute to a growing interdisciplinary research field which have produced, particularly in the last decade, theoretical and methodological advances, alongside with empirical evidence, on how to understand the rise and development of sustainable transitions in different areas, such as energy, mobility, or agri-food systems. The spatial dimensions of sustainability transitions is the focus of the emergent field of geography of sustainable transitions. However, the design of a macro-level green growth strategy, such as the EGD, pulled by a social and political demand for major transformations in the global economy, require a major effort of research from multidisciplinary fields. It is crucial to understand and support in-depth change processes that are or should be undertook by institutions, firms, and value chains, alongside with the assessment of their effects on people and places.
The aim of this special issue is thus to bring together research contributions from different fields, helping to enlighten how these major changes in global systems, such as the energy, mobility, heritage, tourism, agri-food, services, and manufacturing industry, will shape the transitions at the micro and meso-levels and affect people and places, namely territorial inequalities and social exclusion phenomena. Consequently, we welcome innovative theoretical and methodological approaches, as well as empirical evidence, focused on responding to those questions, encompassing multiple topics driven by a focus on the territorial specificities - rural and peripheral regions, sparsely populated areas, small and medium size towns, urban-rural interfaces - , spillovers, exclusions and inequalities raised by green and digital transitions driven by technological disruptive innovation, consumption trends, citizens’ claims, natural resources and ecosystems depletion, public policies, or firm strategies.
These are some examples of topics relevant for the special issue on the territorial dimensions of green and digital transitions:
Planning
There are alternative ways to pre-select papers for this special issue:
Please note that the full paper must be submitted to RSPP by October 15, 2021.
Editors
References
The Regional Science Association International (RSAI), founded in 1954, is an international community of scholars interested in the regional impacts of national or global processes of economic and social change.