wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/e0e0750bb82aca950b8c683b6fdf25cb-niembro-andres/info.yaml

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abstract: 'Socioeconomic inequalities can take different forms. Sometimes they
appear simply as disparities between individuals or households, or
between groups that differ on the basis of factors such as social class,
gender, age, ethnicity, among many others. Likewise, social and economic
inequalities can be perceived in different geographical scales of
analysis, between countries or groups of countries, as well as between
regions, provinces, cities or neighborhoods. Although this paper focuses
on territorial inequalities, there is no doubt that both levels are
deeply interrelated.
At this point, there is no longer any doubt that globalization has gone
hand in hand with increasing inequality in general and, in particular,
growing regional disparities in developing countries throughout Latin
America, Asia, Africa or Eastern Europe, as well as the continuity of
regional inequalities in developed countries such as Spain, for example.
This context poses new challenges for the academic investigation of
inequality, because to explain the phenomenon of unequal regional
development in a globalized world it is necessary to put the actors of
this process and their roots in the territory in the center of the
scene, along with issues such as their position in the economic system
and the generation and reproduction of power asymmetries.
Although for some authors globalization acts as an asymmetric process
that tends to deepen the inequalities between countries and regions, for
others the problem is not strictly the process of globalization, but the
way in which countries, regions and firms are inserted and positioned in
global economy. What is clear is that, being in some way an inevitable
scenario, globalization contains both opportunities and challenges for
regional development, while it generates winners and losers among the
actors and regions involved.
We believe that the approaches of Global Value Chains (GVC) and Global
Production Networks (GPN) can be useful tools for understanding the
relationships between globalization and unequal regional development,
and for analyzing how actors and regions participate in the global
economy, how the power and income are distributed among them and what
possibilities exist for repositioning, among other issues.
If we look at, for example, the literature on developing countries in
Latin America, the tendency in recent decades to adopt the conceptual
framework of GVC is evident, but the contributions from GPN have been
largely unnoticed so far, which has tended to limit its specific
application to the analysis of territorial inequalities. On the other
hand, several authors have highlighted the need to compatibilize, enrich
and eclectically integrate the analytical frameworks of GVC and GPN.
The article aims to cover these research niches with a comprehensive
review of the approaches of global value chains and global production
networks, hoping that it can be used as a theoretical and methodological
contribution to the analysis of regional inequalities. This review is
structured on the basis of a contrast between the respective strengths
and weaknesses of each approach, showing those points where they can
complement and enrich each other.
Throughout the literature there is an old interest in understanding the
changing forms of organization of production and trade at global level,
its evolution and its repercussions over territorial inequalities,
starting for example with dependence theories, center-periphery, world
system and commodity chains, passing through global commodity chains
(GCC) and arriving at the further development of GVC. While there are
some differences in terminology and emphases between the origins of GVC
and GPN, over the years they have tended to shrink and converge, since
these approaches are interrelated and share a common agenda of problems.
Another central aspect is that, despite theoretical discussions (and, in
particular, criticisms of GPN towards GVC), studies under one tradition
or another tend to be largely similar, since there are not great
methodological differences between them. This is directly related to the
balance of strengths and weaknesses of each approach. On the one hand,
authors that support the GPN framework value their greater
analytical-conceptual breadth (covering topics supposedly relegated by
GVC tradition), but it has the counterpart of making its implementation
more complex. In contrast, GVC analysis is best understood as a
methodological approach that can be mobilized within various theoretical
perspectives, although this greater operational versatility comes with
the cost of some degree of theoretical eclecticism.
It should be noted that, although these approaches have been developed,
such as their own names indicate, over the basis of the
internationalization and relocation of different circuits of production
and trade at a global level, their methodological contributions can also
be applied to domestic chains or networks, making a broad interpretation
of trade and exports of a particular region to analyze the interaction
between the local dimension and the extra-regional scale (national or
international factors).
As a closure, we can conclude that the GVC approach is applicable to
regional analysis (avoiding some analytical complexities of GPN) but it
needs to be strengthened with some elements of GPN tradition. In
particular, it is necessary to reinforce the territoriality of chains of
networks, to widen the spectrum of institutions taken into account and
to analyze their relations from a multidimensional (vertical,
horizontal, diagonal) and multiscalar perspective (regional, national,
international, global). At the same time, it is necessary to keep in
mind the existence of different types of networks, power relations and
possibilities of upgrading.
At this point we should also point out some possible restrictions or
weaknesses for the application of the approaches of GVC and GPN to the
analysis of uneven regional development. On the one hand, the idea of
inequality necessarily relates with economic processes that, by their
own nature, can adopt asymmetric and divergent characteristics. But
unlike the analytical (often critical) perspectives we present in this
paper, the use of the concept of global value chains has become popular
in recent years and has entered into the agendas of international
organizations and multilateral forums that tend to adopt a highly
optimistic (or uncritical) view towards globalization and its possible
impacts on the progress of underdeveloped countries and regions. By
circumventing or minimizing the potentially negative and inequitable
factors discussed in the article, this can strongly change public policy
recommendations and strategies.
On the other hand, a weakness of GVC and GPN literatures is the limited
recognition that innovation, knowledge and technology have usually
received. In any case, these approaches recognize the importance of
innovation as a basic input for upgrading processes, but little is said
about the specific nature of the complex processes of learning and
innovation, which represents an interesting line of work to be covered.'
affiliation: 'Niembro, A (Corresponding Author), Univ Nacl Rio Negro Sede Andina,
San Carlos De Bariloche, Rio Negro, Argentina.
Niembro, Andres, Univ Nacl Rio Negro Sede Andina, San Carlos De Bariloche, Rio Negro,
Argentina.'
author: Niembro, Andres
author_list:
- family: Niembro
given: Andres
da: '2023-09-28'
files: []
issn: 0213-7585
journal: REVISTA DE ESTUDIOS REGIONALES
keywords: 'Territorial inequalities; Regional development; Global value chains;
Global production networks'
keywords-plus: 'REGIONAL-DEVELOPMENT; COMMODITY CHAINS; INWARD INVESTMENT; LOCAL
CLUSTERS; LATIN-AMERICA; NORTH-EAST; GOVERNANCE; GEOGRAPHIES;
INNOVATION; PERSPECTIVE'
language: English
month: MAY-AUG
number: '112'
number-of-cited-references: '135'
pages: 15-40
papis_id: 4f2e7b98802bed71e0593c1deedd2c94
ref: Niembro2018globalizationproduct
tags:
- review
times-cited: '0'
title: 'Globalization, productive re-location and territorial inequalities: A comprehensive
review of the approaches of global value chains and global production networks'
type: article
unique-id: WOS:000450677100001
usage-count-last-180-days: '0'
usage-count-since-2013: '41'
web-of-science-categories: Environmental Studies
year: '2018'