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This article outlines a framework for the analysis of economic integration and its relation to the asymmetries of economic and social development. Consciously breaking with state-centric forms of social science, it argues for a research agenda that is more adequate to the exigencies and consequences of globalization than has traditionally been the case in 'development studies'. Drawing on earlier attempts to analyse the cross-border activities of rms, their spatial con gurations and developmental consequences, the article moves beyond these by proposing the framework of the 'global production network' (GPN). It explores the conceptual elements involved in this framework in some detail and then turns to sketch a stylized example of a GPN. The article concludes with a brief indication of the bene ts that could be delivered by research informed by GPN analysis.
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Jeffrey Henderson
Peter Dicken
Martin Heß
Review of International Political Economy
University of Manchester
National University of Singapore
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Henderson et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e8c682f101b906ae2436d9 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09692290210150842