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Tacit knowledge and the economic geography of
context, or The undefinable tacitness of being (there)
Abstract: Within economic geography and industrial economics,
interest in the concept of tacit knowledge has grown steadily in
recent years. Nelson and Winter helped revive this interest in the
work of Michael Polanyi by using the idea of tacit knowledge to
inform their analysis of routines and evolutionary dynamics of technological
change. More recently, the concept has received closer scrutiny.
This paper offers a further contribution to this project by offering
a critical analysis of the prevailing implicit and explicit economic
geographies of tacit knowledge, focusing on the relationship between
tacit knowledge and institutions. While much of the innovation literature
focuses on a single question can tacit knowledge be effectively
shared over long distances the paper argues that this issue
cannot be properly addressed without considering a broader range
of related questions. It highlights three tacit knowledge problems
which, together, provide a more complete view of this issue. First,
how is tacit knowledge produced? Second, how do firms find and appropriate
tacit knowledge? Third, how is tacit knowledge reproduced or shared
that is, how does tacit knowledge promote social learning
processes, and must the participants be geographically proximate
in order for effective learning to occur? The paper revisits Michael
Polanyi's original conception of tacit knowledge, showing it to
be limited by its experiential and cognitive emphasis, with insufficient
attention devoted to the role and origins of social context. Alternatively,
the paper argues that one cannot sort out the geography of tacit
knowledge without inquiring into the foundations of context and
culture, and the institutional underpinnings of economic activity,
taking the work of another Polanyi Karl as the logical
starting point.
| Author: |
Gertler, M. S.
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| Publisher: |
Journal of Economic Geography, vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 75-99.
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| Date: |
2003 |
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