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A geographical political economy of banking crises: a peripheral region perspective on organisational concentration and spatial centralisation in Britain

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Neill Marshall

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Abstract

Responding to academic interest in the economic geographies of financial bubbles and crashes, this article examines the British experience of the 2007–2009 global banking crisis. It adopts a culturally informed geographical political economy approach that explores why institutions most seriously affected by the 2007–2009 crisis were located in peripheral locations. The banking crisis is viewed as an episodic round of spatial centralisation in the City of London, reinforcing a previous round of concentration of banking institutions in the late 19th century, and the article analyses the wider implications of this process of concentration for peripheral regions increasingly integrated into a financial sector dominated by the capital. Such a perspective makes a convincing case for a geographically rooted and situated understanding of the global financial crisis.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Marshall JN

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society

Year: 2013

Volume: 6

Issue: 3

Pages: 455-477

Print publication date: 25/03/2013

ISSN (print): 1752-1378

ISSN (electronic): 1752-1386

Publisher: Oxford Journals

URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cjres/rst002

DOI: 10.1093/cjres/rst002


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