An increased global interdependence poses both opportunities and obligations for a revitalized geography of international trade. THis subject area has never acquired a satisfactory focurs because its practitioners have taken a limited view of their topic, have neglected related work in other disciplines, and have failed to consider the policy implications of their study. As a remedy, this paper proposes a geography of international trade based upon three interrelated problem areas: the decision-making processes, the spatial fabric, and the space-time metric of world trade.
TOWARD AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO THE GEOGRAPHY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE
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