This paper adopts a global perspective to investigate
external relations of German cities, both transnationally
and on the national scale. At the centre of the
analysis are the locational strategies of major advanced
producer service firms that link the cities in which they
operate through a multitude of flows. Using an interlocking
network model and data on the organizational structure of
leading business service firms, the paper measures and interprets
the extent to which German cities were integrated
in the world city network in 2008. The global positions and
national network patterns of 14 major German cities are
explored, as well as the sectoral strengths and geographical
orientations of their external relations. The paper concludes
with an assessment of the trajectory of German cities in
the world city network between the turn of the twenty-first
century and the onset of the current financial crisis. The
analysis reveals a geography of advanced producer services
that is polycentric in character but does not map directly
onto the distribution of other metropolitan functions.
In a longitudinal perspective, German cities experienced an
absolute and relative decline in global network connectivity
between 2000 and 2008, which raises questions about
the changing strategic importance of German cities in the
world city network.
History
School
Social Sciences
Department
Geography and Environment
Citation
HOYLER, M., 2011. External relations of German cities through intra-firm networks – a global perspective. Raumforschung und Raumordnung, 69 (3), pp. 147-159.