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This book is an attempt to bridge the academic discipline of economic geography with the professional field of economic development. Through case studies of economic development, it illustrates two fundamental concepts of the sub-discipline of economic geography: scale and spatial connections. It demonstrates some of the ways that economic development policies and plans are linked globally, nationally, regionally, and locally. It ties together several studies of communities and transportation systems in Texas and Mexico carried out from the late 2010's through 2021. The studies shed light on…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book is an attempt to bridge the academic discipline of economic geography with the professional field of economic development. Through case studies of economic development, it illustrates two fundamental concepts of the sub-discipline of economic geography: scale and spatial connections. It demonstrates some of the ways that economic development policies and plans are linked globally, nationally, regionally, and locally. It ties together several studies of communities and transportation systems in Texas and Mexico carried out from the late 2010's through 2021. The studies shed light on the need to study economic development at multiple scales and to do so through blended qualitative research methods that include conversations with economic development stakeholders, published data, news content from the business and trade media, and direct observation of the built environment.

The book is a set of narratives that combine descriptions of the evolution of commercial transportation systems, economic promotion in selected communities, and corresponding changes in the built environment. It is organized into three sections, each of which corresponds to a different scale at which economic development functions: macro, regional, and local.
Autorenporträt
Michael S. Yoder (Ph.D.) is an academic geographer with 28 years of teaching experience in the discipline, and 34 years of research experience in the geography of economic development, agricultural geography, urban geography, transportation, and community assessments. Michael holds doctoral and master's degrees in agricultural geography from Louisiana State University and the University of South Carolina, respectively, and a bachelor's degree in marketing from the University of Houston. His published academic articles and book chapters are primarily case studies involving field and archival research on suburbanization in the U.S. and Mexico, social housing and industrial development in Mexico, transportation corridors and interior ports in the U.S and Mexico, and policy related to economic development.  Michael's regional specializations include the American South, northern Mexico, South Texas, the U.S.-Mexico border, and Central America. His teaching focuses on urban planning, political geography, the geography of Latin America, economic development, and world regional geography. He has served on several municipal and county advisory boards in Texas and Arkansas related to transportation infrastructure and urban planning.