Transcript Day 6

GEOG 346: DAY 6
Economic Transformation
Housekeeping Items
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A reminder that that the outlines for the major
assignments are due on February 4th, preferably in
hard copy form, but an electronic submission is OK.
Is everyone clear on the difference between the
case studies and the mini-field trips?
I sent everyone a copy of the draft schedule for
the latter, which we need to nail down today. I was
mistaken: the buses are booked for Tuesdays, not
Thursdays. When it proves mutually convenient, we
can swap dates between groups, even it makes the
trip topic out of sequence.
Housekeeping Items
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Another relevant resource to what
we have been discussing is the
book and the film entitled Energy
Autonomy about the efforts of
German parliamentarian,
Hermann Scheer, to support
renewable energy efforts. I have
mentioned him before and will
pass the book around.
Today we’re going to focus on the
economic transformation that
cities have been undergoing and
the implications for urban and
regional management.
Hermann Scheer
Economic Transformation
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What are some of the major changes that we have
seen in the Canadian economy over the last fifty
years, and how have these manifested themselves
regionally in Nanaimo?
The traditional way of breaking down an economy
is to talk about four main sectors: primary (natural
resource), secondary (manufacturing), tertiary
(service), and quaternary (knowledge-intensive).
What have been some of the big changes with
regard to these in B.C. in general, and in Nanaimo
in particular?
Economic Transformation
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Sociologist Richard Florida has had a major impact on the
field of economic geography, and related disciplines, with
his writing on the “creative class” consisting of “people who
add value to the economy through their creativity” (see p.
68 of The Rise of the Creative Class). They include scientists
and engineers, professors, writers and artists, entertainers,
actors and filmmakers, software and game developers,
architects, researchers, managers, lawyers, and doctors, etc.
This has major implications for traditional migration patterns
and employer-employee relations. In the past, people often
followed the jobs (can you think of examples where this is
still true?). The quality of the urban or regional environment
was often a secondary consideration.
Source: http://explorepa
history.com/displayimage.
php?imgId=1-2-444&story
Id=1-9-E
Economic Transformation
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What Florida observed was that members of the creative
class were very picky about where they wanted to live. They
wanted to live in cities that were diverse, tolerant, that had a
vibrant arts scene, and offered abundant cultural and
recreational amenities such as restaurants, cafés, places to ski
and hike, etc. He even found a correlation between the
number of gays and lesbians and how attractive a given
location would be because both groups valued tolerance and
urbanity.
Implications for gentrification??
To some degree, these factors have also been part of the
calculus of how post-secondary students have chosen where to
go to school – something that VIU propaganda tries to trade
on (“Love Where You Learn”), and that forms something of a
challenge for places like UNBC (Prince George anyone?)
Economic Transformation
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What are the implications of these changes for cities’
and regions’ economic development strategies?
Also, given what we discussed last class about peak
oil, what are the implications in terms of economic relocalization?
One grassroots effort to re-localize economies is the
transition towns movement, which has grown
explosively. For more on it, see
http://www.transitionnetwork.org/ and
http://well95490.org/
In addition to these grassroots efforts, what can be
done by municipalities and regions? San Francisco has
mandated that all public agencies have to buy local
food.
Economic Transformation
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A particular challenge involves rust belt cities in the
U.S., Great Britain, and to a much lesser degree in
Canada, cities that have suffered a major lost of jobs:
http://digital.films.com/PortalViewVideo.aspx?xtid=
35282.
Fostering ‘Sense of Place’
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“Placemaking is the process through which we collectively
shape our public realm to maximize shared value. Rooted
in community-based participation, Placemaking
involves the planning, design, management and
programming of public spaces. More than just creating
better urban design of public spaces, Placemaking
facilitates creative patterns of activities and connections
(cultural, economic, social, ecological) that define a place
and support its ongoing evolution. Placemaking is how
people are more collectively and intentionally shaping our
world, and our future on this planet.” – Project for Public
Spaces (www.pps.org).
Nanaimo and ‘Sense of Place’
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Where are the most and
least successful places in
Nanaimo?
On campus?
What makes them work or
not work?
What is the relationship
between sense of place,
public space, pedestrianfriendliness, and sense of
community?