The ‘region’ and ‘regional change’ have been elusive ideas within political and
economic geography, and in essence require a greater understanding of their
dynamic characteristics. Trailing in the backwaters of the devolution to the
Celtic nations of Britain, the contemporary era of New Labour’s politicaleconomic
ideology, manifest through ‘third-way’ governance in England
places the region and its functional capacity into the heart of geographical
inquiry. Drawing upon a new regionalist epistemology, this paper seeks to
recover a sense of (regional) political economy through a critical investigation
of the development and formulation of Blair’s “New Regional Policy” (NRP). I
address how New Labour has attempted to marry economic regionalisation on
the one hand, and democratic regionalism on the other. This paper
specifically questions the wisdom of such a marriage of politically distinct
ideologies through a critical investigation of the underlying contradictions of
their strategy from both a theoretical and empirical standpoint. Demonstrated
both in the North East no vote in 2004, and in the post-mortem undertaken by
the ODPM Select Committee in 2005, the paper illustrates how a loss of
political drive gradually undermined the capacity of devolution to deliver in
England. Finally, I argue that through the lens of the NRP we can speculate
on some of the wider issues and implications for the study of regional
governance.
History
School
Social Sciences
Department
Geography and Environment
Citation
HARRISON, J., 2006. The political-economy of Blair’s “New Regional Policy.” Geoforum, 37 (6), pp. 932-943