1st Edition

Geography and Retailing

By Peter Scott Copyright 1970
    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    An important contribution to our understanding of the distribution of retail activities, particularly within cities, this book provides a critical review of the literature on the subject. It points out the major general propositions concerning retailing from the geographical point of view, and identifies key research problems, which need to be examined in order to push forward the frontiers of this sub field of economic geography. It presents a major critique of the central-place model, which has come to hold an important place in the methodology of economic geography, and clearly and decisively shows the model to be static, deterministic, retrospective and of little value for predictive purposes.

    1: Retail Geography and Central-Place Studies; 2: Retail Sites and Spatial Affinities; 3: Retail Organisation & Government Regulation; 4: Retail Markets and Establishment Size; 5: Retail Trends and Spatial Competition; 6: Shopping-Centre Delimitation and Classification; 7: Hierarchical Systems: Selected British Studies; 8: Traditional Markets and Shopping-Centre Systems; 9: Hierarchical Systems: Selected American Studies; 10: Centrality, Markets, and Shopping-Centre Structure; 11: Prediction Techniques and Retail-Location Models

    Biography

    Peter Scott