@article{oai:stars.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000316, author = {野尻, 亘 and NOJIRI, Wataru}, issue = {44}, journal = {桃山学院大学人間科学, Human sciences review, St. Andrew's University}, month = {Mar}, note = {The role of `spatial fixes' in international transformation is linked to capital formation. Harvey stresses the general need for long-term investment in the built environment, for example, fixed, immobile capital, to facilitate the mobility of other capital and explores how such investments affect locational dynamics. Harvey starts from the interface between transport and communication possibilities on one hand and locational decisions on the other. This reflects Marx's claim that the productive forces of capitalism include the capacity to overcome spatial barriers through investment and innovation in transport and communication. This also connects to expanded reproduction in so far as capitalist's growth imperative lead to market expansion and hence to intensified transport and communication links beyond a given region. Such responses reduce the turnover time of industrial capital. Besides the normal role of infrastructural facilities in annihilating spaces by time and expanding the market, Harvey addresses their role in buying time through the built environment. Crisis tendencies can be overcome in short to medium through investments that absorb surplus capital and future productivity and profitability. Investments to the built environment also provide a potential escape from crisis via market expansion.}, pages = {193--217}, title = {David Harveyの建造環境について(岩津洋二教授追悼号)}, year = {2013}, yomi = {ノジリ, ワタル} }