Abstract
This paper considers the political geography of localism and reviews the insights of geographers regarding localism and locality. It identifies three main approaches to locality in Human Geography.
- Regional geographers, humanistic geographers and spatial scientists view localities as relatively natural phenomena.
- Marxist and political-economic geographers view localities as social phenomena produced by uneven capitalist development.
- Post-structuralist geographers view localities as characteristically open, plural and dynamic.
- First, localism describes seemingly natural ways of life – organised to maximise authentic experiences of place in the case of Humanistic Geography and to minimise the friction of distance in the case of spatial science.
- Second, localism describes cultural-political expressions of spatial divisions of labour, including local political cultures, local proactivity in the context of large-scale economic restructuring, and actually existing, variegated, local neoliberalisations.
- Third, localism describes struggles to produce locally scaled action, including projects of local autonomy and self-sufficiency directed against the central state, movements to defend collective consumption from developers, coalitions to defend fixed capital against devaluation, and state downscaling to regulate capitalism.
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