Economic geography II: The economic geographies of the COVID-19 pandemic

This is the second of three reports on economic geography. It focuses on research that addresses issues deemed to be both urgent and generative of crisis. This report focuses on the crisis created by the emergence of COVID-19. While the virus may have been novel, many of its implications were not, as several important processes of uneven development and inequality accelerated. The paper first determines the extent to which the emergence of a pandemic virus constituted a ‘crisis’, before examining some of the most salient economic geographical impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. These include the rise of friction within the global economy resulting in significant disruption to global supply chains; the acceleration of the digital platform as an ever more dominant form of economic organisation; and how the pandemic deepened social inequalities and uneven development. The report concludes with observations about the emergence of what has been described as a post-pandemic polycrisis.

[1]  Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh,et al.  Work From Home and the Office Real Estate Apocalypse , 2022, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[2]  A. Serenko The Great Resignation: the great knowledge exodus or the onset of the Great Knowledge Revolution? , 2022, J. Knowl. Manag..

[3]  N. Brenner,et al.  Between the colossal and the catastrophic: Planetary urbanization and the political ecologies of emergent infectious disease , 2022, Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space.

[4]  Candaş Ayan Shutdown: how COVID shook the world’s economy , 2022, Eurasian Geography and Economics.

[5]  A. Hughes,et al.  Global value chains for medical gloves during the COVID‐19 pandemic: Confronting forced labour through public procurement and crisis , 2022, Global Networks.

[6]  Max Nathan The city and the virus , 2021, Urban Studies (Edinburgh, Scotland).

[7]  Gareth Bryant,et al.  The asset economy during and after the Covid‐19 crisis , 2021, IPPR Progressive Review.

[8]  F. Collins Temporary migration and regional development amidst Covid‐19: Invercargill and Queenstown , 2021, New Zealand geographer.

[9]  M. Sparke,et al.  Neoliberal disease: COVID-19, co-pathogenesis and global health insecurities , 2021, Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space.

[10]  Moritz Breul Advanced Introduction to Global Production Networks , 2021, Economic Geography.

[11]  M. Kearnes,et al.  The uneven distribution of futurity: Slow emergencies and the event of COVID‐19 , 2021, Geographical Research.

[12]  Anne Helmond,et al.  Pandemic platform governance: Mapping the global ecosystem of COVID-19 response apps , 2021, Internet Policy Rev..

[13]  G. Wei,et al.  Vaccine-escape and fast-growing mutations in the United Kingdom, the United States, Singapore, Spain, India, and other COVID-19-devastated countries , 2021, Genomics.

[14]  A. Leyshon Economic geography I: Uneven development, ‘left behind places’ and ‘levelling up’ in a time of crisis , 2021, Progress in Human Geography.

[15]  G. Wei,et al.  Vaccine-escape and fast-growing mutations in the United Kingdom, the United States, Singapore, Spain, South Africa, and other COVID-19-devastated countries , 2021, 2103.08023.

[16]  G. Katul,et al.  Intensity and frequency of extreme novel epidemics , 2021, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[17]  G. Smith,et al.  Closing schools is not evidence based and harms children , 2021, BMJ.

[18]  D. Buonsenso,et al.  SCHOOLS CLOSURES DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC: A Catastrophic Global Situation. , 2020, The Pediatric infectious disease journal.

[19]  Gema Zamarro,et al.  Gender differences in couples’ division of childcare, work and mental health during COVID-19 , 2020, Review of Economics of the Household.

[20]  J. Roitman Framing the Crisis: COVID-19 , 2021, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[21]  Sharon Zukin Planetary Silicon Valley: Deconstructing New York’s innovation complex , 2021 .

[22]  John Gathergood,et al.  The English Patient: Evaluating Local Lockdowns Using Real-Time COVID-19 & Consumption Data , 2020, 2010.04129.

[23]  D. Wójcik Financial geography II: The impacts of FinTech – Financial sector and centres, regulation and stability, inclusion and governance , 2020, Progress in Human Geography.

[24]  R. Murthy Pale rider: the spanish flu of 1918 and how it changed the world , 2020, Indian Journal of Social Psychiatry.

[25]  D. Harvey,et al.  The Condition of Postmodernity , 2020, The New Social Theory Reader.

[26]  M. Sokol,et al.  Winners And Losers In Coronavirus Times: Financialisation, Financial Chains and Emerging Economic Geographies of The Covid‐19 Pandemic , 2020, Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie = Journal of economic and social geography = Revue de geographie economique et humaine = Zeitschrift fur okonomische und soziale Geographie = Revista de geografia economica y social.

[27]  J. Crampton,et al.  Geographies of the COVID-19 pandemic , 2020, Dialogues in Human Geography.

[28]  Mark Graham,et al.  (Dis)embeddedness and (de)commodification: COVID-19, Uber, and the unravelling logics of the gig economy , 2020 .

[29]  Fenglong Wang,et al.  Territorial traps in controlling the COVID-19 pandemic , 2020 .

[30]  Sabina Lawreniuk Necrocapitalist networks: COVID-19 and the ‘dark side’ of economic geography , 2020, Dialogues in Human Geography.

[31]  D. Wójcik,et al.  COVID‐19 and Finance: Market Developments So Far and Potential Impacts on the Financial Sector and Centres , 2020, Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie = Journal of economic and social geography = Revue de geographie economique et humaine = Zeitschrift fur okonomische und soziale Geographie = Revista de geografia economica y social.

[32]  Darja Reuschke,et al.  Changing workplace geographies in the COVID-19 crisis , 2020 .

[33]  J. Davies,et al.  From crisis to catastrophe: The death and viral legacies of austere neoliberalism in Europe? , 2020, Dialogues in Human Geography.

[34]  T. Brydges,et al.  Garment worker rights and the fashion industry’s response to COVID-19 , 2020, Dialogues in Human Geography.

[35]  Oliver Ibert,et al.  From Corona Virus to Corona Crisis: The Value of An Analytical and Geographical Understanding of Crisis , 2020, Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie = Journal of economic and social geography = Revue de geographie economique et humaine = Zeitschrift fur okonomische und soziale Geographie = Revista de geografia economica y social.

[36]  R. Kitchin,et al.  Civil liberties or public health, or civil liberties and public health? Using surveillance technologies to tackle the spread of COVID-19 , 2020, Space and Polity.

[37]  Stuart A. Gietel-Basten,et al.  International remittance flows and the economic and social consequences of COVID-19 , 2020, Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space.

[38]  Sarah Smith,et al.  Baby steps: the gender division of childcare during the COVID-19 pandemic , 2020, Oxford Review of Economic Policy.

[39]  Erwin van Tuijl,et al.  Uber-production: From global networks to digital platforms , 2020 .

[40]  M. Kenney,et al.  The platform economy: restructuring the space of capitalist accumulation , 2020, Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society.

[41]  J. Peck,et al.  The Platform Conjuncture , 2020 .

[42]  Victo José da Silva Neto Platform capitalism , 2019, Revista Brasileira de Inovação.

[43]  J. Zeitlin,et al.  Introduction: the European Union beyond the polycrisis? Integration and politicization in an age of shifting cleavages , 2019, The European Union Beyond the Polycrisis?.

[44]  J. Dijck,et al.  Platformisation , 2019, Internet Policy Rev..

[45]  Stefan Larsson,et al.  A Platform Society , 2018 .

[46]  Martin Danyluk,et al.  Capital’s logistical fix: Accumulation, globalization, and the survival of capitalism , 2018 .

[47]  M. Bresalier Animals and the Shaping of Modern Medicine: One Health and its Histories , 2017 .

[48]  A. Leyshon,et al.  Platform capitalism: the intermediation and capitalization of digital economic circulation , 2017 .

[49]  A. Cassidy,et al.  One Health and its Histories: Animals and the Shaping of Modern Medicine , 2017 .

[50]  E. Sheppard The Uneven Geographies of Globalizing Capitalism , 2016 .

[51]  H. Yeung,et al.  Global Production Networks: Theorizing Economic Development in an Interconnected World , 2015 .

[52]  S. Hinchliffe More than one world, more than one health: re-configuring interspecies health. , 2015, Social science & medicine.

[53]  S. Hinchliffe,et al.  One world, one health? Social science engagements with the one health agenda. , 2015, Social science & medicine.

[54]  M. Gilbert,et al.  The dawn of Structural One Health: a new science tracking disease emergence along circuits of capital. , 2015, Social science & medicine.

[55]  Deborah E. Cowen The Deadly Life of Logistics , 2014 .

[56]  N. Thrift,et al.  Globalization in practice , 2014 .

[57]  Abdul-Kareem Ahmed Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic , 2013, The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine.

[58]  L. Daston The anti-crisis , 1999 .

[59]  Edgar Morin,et al.  Homeland Earth: A Manifesto for the New Millenium , 1999 .