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    Rhine-Scheldt delta port system

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The production of capitalist ‘‘smooth’’ space in global port operationsPortStudies

The production of capitalist ‘‘smooth’’ space in global port operations

July 20th, 2015 PortStudies

READ ALSO

Container alliance strategies, market concentration and equality: A dynamic time warping clustering approach
Container alliance strategies, market concentration and equality: A dynamic time warping clustering approach
Port Governance & the Implications of Institutional fragmentation: lessons from Colombia
Port Governance & the Implications of Institutional fragmentation: lessons from Colombia
A new conception of port governance under climate change
A new conception of port governance under climate change
Rhine-Scheldt delta port system
Rhine-Scheldt delta port system

New developments in a post-Fordist economic environment have changed the source of port competitiveness from economies of scale based on basic production factors (capital, land, labour) to economies of scope based on advanced production (service) factors. The institutional setting in which ports are now embedded requires methods of analysis that go beyond those traditionally applied in transport geography, but port geography research has not embraced critical, radical or relational geographies. Thus, questions relating to the new conceptions of space and networks created through the corporatisation of the industry remain unanswered.

The latest study of PortEconomics associate member Gordon Wilmsmeier along with Jason Monios (Transport Research Institute, Edinburgh Napier University), to be published in Journal of Transport Geography, examines prevailing conceptualisations of space in port geography and elaborates the case for a smooth space conceptualisation. In doing so, it draws on two theoretical traditions of the spatial impacts of capital accumulation, beginning with Marx and Harvey to demonstrate how ports represent an exemplar of the inherently unstable ”spatial fix” of mobile capital, then turning to the concept of ”smooth space” introduced by Deleuze and Guattari.

Using these concepts, the paper reflects on the production of capitalist smooth space in the global port operations sector, in which a handful of multinational corporations manage portfolios of major ports across the globe. The result is an inherent contradiction between a port’s embeddedness in its local setting and regional hinterland and the expanding global corporatocracy driving its operational strategy. This paper argues, therefore, that port devolution and development cannot be understood in the absence of a critique of their capitalist context.

Visit journal’s page to download Gordon’s and Jason’s latest study.

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Gordon Wilmsmeier

Gordon Wilmsmeier holds the Kühne Professorial Chair in Logistics at the Universidad de los Andes in Bogota, Colombia. From 2011 to 2017, he worked as Economic Affairs Officer in the Infrastructure Services Unit at the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. Previously he worked at Edinburgh Napier University’s Transport Research Institute (TRI), and as consultant for UN-ECLAC, UNCTAD, UN-OHRLLS, World Bank, JICA, IDB, CAF, and the OAS. Gordon is honorary professor for Maritime Geography at the University of Applied Sciences in Bremen, Germany, visiting lecturer at Göteborg University, Sweden and Universidad Nacional de San Martín, Argentina. He has published over 100 book chapters, journal papers, institutional publications and working papers. His research focuses on transport and economic geography, maritime economics and energy efficiency with particular interests in international trade and transport geography and transport costs, sustainable mobility strategies, maritime transport networks and connectivity , inland waterways and inland shipping policy. In the area of port economics his research concentrates on devolution and privatization, and organizational performance and efficiency, as well as sustainable performance analysis. Currently, a specific focus is related to measuring energy, emissions and water footprints in ports. He is chair of the global Port Performance Research Network (PPRN), IAME member, the Sustainability Working Group of the European Freight & Logistics Leaders Forum, and associate member of PortEconomics.

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