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Location theory, regional science and economics
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Year: 1987 Publisher: Louvain-la-Neuve: UCL. Center for operations research and econometrics,

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Unified Theory of Cities
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Year: 2021 Publisher: National Bureau of Economic Research

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Concurrence sur le marché du travail, capitalisation foncière et développement régional
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Year: 1994 Publisher: Namur: Ministère de la région wallonne. Service des études et de la statistique,

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Choosing the optimal location of the firm
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Year: 1972 Publisher: Louvain

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Public facility location and urban spatial structure
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Year: 1990 Publisher: Louvain-la-Neuve Center for Operations Research and Econometrics

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Concurrence sur le marché du travail, capitalisation foncière et développement régional
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Year: 1994 Publisher: Namur

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Article
How Transport Costs Shape the Spatial Pattern of Economic Activity
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Year: 2009 Publisher: Paris : OECD Publishing,

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By its very nature, transport is linked to trade. Trade being one of the oldest human activities, the transport of commodities is, therefore, a fundamental ingredient of any society. People get involved in trade because they want to consume goods that are not produced within reach. The Silk Road provides evidence that shipping high-valued goods over long distances has been undertaken because of this very precise reason. But why is it that not all goods are produced everywhere? The reason is that regions are specialized in the production of certain products. The first explanation for specialization that comes to mind is that nature supplies specific environments needed to produce particular goods. According to Diamond (1997), spatial differences in edible plants, with abundant nutrients, and wild animals, capable of being domesticated to help man in his agricultural and transport activities, explain why only a few regions have become independent centers of food production. Though relevant for explaining the emergence of civilization in a few areas, we must go further to understand why, in the wake of the Industrial Revolution, interregional and international trade has grown so rapidly.

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Transport


Book
Concurrence sur le marché du travail, capitalisation foncière et développement régional.
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Year: 1994 Publisher: Namur Ministère de la Région wallonne. Service des études et de la statistique

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Dissertation
Contribution à la théorie microéconomique spatiale
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Year: 1975 Publisher: Liège : Université de Liège [ULg], Faculté de droit,

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Divers --- Divers


Article
How Transport Costs Shape the Spatial Pattern of Economic Activity
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Year: 2009 Publisher: Paris : OECD Publishing,

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Abstract

By its very nature, transport is linked to trade. Trade being one of the oldest human activities, the transport of commodities is, therefore, a fundamental ingredient of any society. People get involved in trade because they want to consume goods that are not produced within reach. The Silk Road provides evidence that shipping high-valued goods over long distances has been undertaken because of this very precise reason. But why is it that not all goods are produced everywhere? The reason is that regions are specialized in the production of certain products. The first explanation for specialization that comes to mind is that nature supplies specific environments needed to produce particular goods. According to Diamond (1997), spatial differences in edible plants, with abundant nutrients, and wild animals, capable of being domesticated to help man in his agricultural and transport activities, explain why only a few regions have become independent centers of food production. Though relevant for explaining the emergence of civilization in a few areas, we must go further to understand why, in the wake of the Industrial Revolution, interregional and international trade has grown so rapidly.

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Transport

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