Urban economic structures as multidimensional networks: A complex systems framework for analyzing economic development trajectories
In: ST Shutters (2024) Complexity 2024:5521625, doi:10.1155/2024/5521625
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In: ST Shutters (2024) Complexity 2024:5521625, doi:10.1155/2024/5521625
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In: Shutters, S. T. (2021) Modelling long-term COVID-19 impacts on the U.S. workforce of 2029. Plos One 16(12):e0260797, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0260797
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In: Applied Network Science 7, 43 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s41109-022-00487-7
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Working paper
In: Entropy 2020, 22(10), 1078; https://doi.org/10.3390/e22101078
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Working paper
In: ST Shutters, K Waters (2022) Industrial structure and a tradeoff between productivity and resilience. Studies in Business and Economics 17(3):224-240, doi:10.2478/sbe-2022-0057
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Working paper
In: PLoS ONE 17(4):e0267210. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0267210
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In: Shutters, S.T.; Waters, K.; Muneepeerakul, R. (2022) Triad Analysis of Global Energy Trade Networks and Implications for Energy Trade Stability. Energies 15(10):3673, doi:10.3390/en15103673
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In: Urban studies, Band 53, Heft 16, S. 3439-3454
ISSN: 1360-063X
Creative (knowledge-intensive) occupations are now widely seen as a basis for urban economic prosperity. Yet the transitional pathways from a city's current economy to a more creative economy are often difficult to discern or to navigate. Here we use a network perspective of occupational interdependencies to address questions of urban transitions to a creative economy. This perspective allows us to assess alternative pathways and to compare cities with regard to their progress along these pathways. We find that US urban areas follow a general trajectory towards a creative economy that requires them to increasingly specialise, not only in creative occupations, but also in non-creative ones – presumably because certain non-creative occupations complement the tasks performed by related creative occupations. This creates a pull towards non-creative occupations that becomes ever stronger as a city moves more towards a creative economy. All in all, cities with the most creative economies must undergo an overall diversification of specialised occupations, with a greater diversification rate for creative occupations, and maintain those creative specialisations despite the pull towards a non-creative economy.
In: Environment and planning. B, Planning and design, Band 43, Heft 1, S. 198-209
ISSN: 1472-3417
Home to over half the world's population, cities are the drivers of the global economy and the primary influencers of the Earth's sustainability. Thus, the burden of sustainable economic development falls ever more on cities, with many global organizations and governments calling for the promotion of 'green' economies. Yet how does a city move from its current economic structure to a green economy? Using detailed occupational data for US cities, we develop a green jobs index based on the network of interdependencies between occupational specializations. Using this index we quantify how close a city's current economy is to the green economy. We further show that movement or transition through this 'occupation space' toward a green economy is a slow and difficult process, with the average annual movement towards a green economy across all US cities being close to zero. Such difficulty is uncorrelated with a city's current population size, density, per capita GDP, per capita income, or even the city's current green jobs index. Furthermore, the structure of occupational interdependencies gives rise to suboptimal movements towards the green economy.
In: Palgrave communications, Band 1, Heft 1
ISSN: 2055-1045
AbstractResilience is increasing rapidly as a framework to understand and manage coupled human–natural systems. Yet the concept of resilience is rarely quantified. Here we quantify system resilience by operationalizing the notion of system tightness. Multiple resilience frameworks recognize the strong relationship between system tightness and resilience, though they differ on the directionality of that relationship. Thus, by measuring the system tightness we ultimately measure urban economic resilience, with the added benefit of empirically determining the directionality of the relationship between tightness and resilience. We then assess how well this measure predicts the response of urban economies to the recent so-called Great Recession. Results show that cities with lower tightness (higher resilience) fared better during the recession with respect to several economic productivity measures. However, in the absence of shocks, those with higher tightness (lower resilience) exhibit superior economic performance. Thus, a tradeoff between efficiency and resilience is nicely reflected in the empirical data. Although this study deals with economic shocks, quantitative metrics based on its methodology may help anticipate a city's response to shocks more generally, such as natural disasters, climate change, social unrest or significant policy shifts.
In: Palgrave Communications, Band 1, S. 15010-
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