Peter Dicken | |
Birth Name: | Peter Dicken |
Birth Date: | 1938 |
Birth Place: | England |
Nationality: | British |
Known For: | Academic Research into Globalisation |
Occupation: | Emeritus Professor |
Education: | MA (Manchester), PhD (Uppsala), AcSS. |
Peter Dicken (born 1938) is an economic geographer whose research focuses on processes and patterns in globalisation. He joined the University of Manchester in 1966 after completing an MA there.[1] He is currently an emeritus professor at the same university, to which he has dedicated his academic life, continuing research on global patterns of business and globalisation. His self-described area is "the changing multi-scalar geographies of the global economy and on the structures and dynamics of global production networks, particularly the relationships between transnational corporations and states".[2]
Throughout his career Peter Dicken has been involved in the following positions:
Dicken's research areas have involved:
Dicken was awarded a personal chair in 1988, recognising the professor status of his achievements and research in economic geographies.
He was awarded the Victoria Medal of the Royal Geographical Society with the Institute of British Geographers in 2001 for "advancing research on globalization and economic geography". He received an honorary doctorate from the University of Uppsala, Sweden, in 2002. He was also awarded the Centenary Medal of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society in 2007 for "distinguished contributions to the study of the geographies of the global economy".
Peter Dicken's Global Shift, his most widely cited work, has sold tens of thousands of copies over the last 30 years.[1] He has been called "one of the most influential economic geographers in the discipline over the last 30 years".[1] His uncontroversial approach to his research is one reason his works remain so popular within the discipline. He was among the first to point to the significance of TNCs, providing detailed analysis of their role in the world economy as a barometer for global economic change.
Dicken provided a greater understanding of chains and network structures, in particular by understanding the role, locational behaviour and organisation of Japanese capital and firms in Western economies. His work on the economic restructuring of Japanese firms regarding the Just-In-Time production process is widely cited. Through his work, he was able to explain global economic change in relation to global-local dialect.