@article{oai:stars.repo.nii.ac.jp:00008926, author = {野尻, 亘 and NOJIRI, Wataru}, issue = {2}, journal = {桃山学院大学社会学論集, ST.ANDREW'S UNIVERSITY SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW}, month = {Feb}, note = {Economic geography based on American and European regulation theory explains the changes in the new industrial spaces occurring in tandem with the transition from the demise of Fordism to a flexible production system. The argument of this paper is that Asia’s rapid industrialization and economic development in the 21st century from the perspective of regulation theory can be interpreted as a shift from peripheral Fordism to export-led development (‘exportism’). Developing this analysis, the paper further compares and classifies differences between accumulation regimes and modes of regulation in Asian economies. In addition, comparing Japan with the rest of Asia, the paper also refers on the decline of the Japanese economy and the emergence of neoliberalism in Japan. In conclusion, the author discusses the ongoing metamorphosis of current regulation theory and its relationship with development in economic geography. After the crisis of Fordism, economic geography based on regulation theory, previously encompassed discussions of the impact of the Just-in- Time system and the flexible production system on location patterns such as agglomeration and dispersion. However, as regulation theory’s focus mainly shifted from wage-labor relationships to the search for new accumulation regimes based on severe competition in international finance markets, economic geographers’ interest also moved towards spatial inequality and disparity generated in the global neoliberalism.}, pages = {151--188}, title = {レギュラシオン理論は現在の日本・アジア経済にどのように応用しうるのか : 経済地理学の視点から}, volume = {51}, year = {2018}, yomi = {ノジリ, ワタル} }