Environment and Planning A-Economy and Space

Papers
(The H4-Index of Environment and Planning A-Economy and Space is 28. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2022-05-01 to 2026-05-01.)
ArticleCitations
Winners of the Ashby Prizes103
Unravelling neighbourhood change: Decomposing the effects of residential mobility and incumbent change on credit access in California98
Governing through ESG and the green spirit of asset manager capitalism93
Financialization and local statecraft: Truth and consequences61
The geometry of (anti)imperialism in food regime analysis55
Becoming ‘ farazat’ : Re-examining feminisation from a Tunis used clothes sorting factory47
The multiple-theories problem: The case of spatial industrial clustering45
The landlord state goes abroad: The remaking of the Norwegian ‘Energy Nation’ as a global rentier45
Uneven and combined development in anthropology44
Reformulating theories of ‘accumulation by dispossession’: ‘Contested accumulations through displacement’ in postcolonial Punjab, Pakistan43
The political: A view from Jakarta’s kampungs42
Anticipating Sino-UK fintech networks and the changing geographies of money as infrastructure40
Reorienting new state capitalism to food and agriculture38
Planning deregulation and commodification: How is housing precarity structurally encouraged through Permitted Development Rights?37
Patterns of opportunity spaces and agency across regional contexts: Conditions and drivers for change37
Working with and against climate finance36
Introduction: Critical approaches to rentiership35
Adaptable state-controlled market actors: Underwriters and investors in the market of local government bonds in China33
The blockchain challenge for Sweden's housing and mortgage markets33
The making of migrants’ wageless life: Exploiting by debasing32
Grasping transformative regional development – Exploring intersections between industrial paths and sustainability transitions31
Racialized downgrading and upgrading: Dis/articulation and the Fijian kava commodity chain30
The horizontal governance of environmental upgrading: Lessons from the Prosecco and Valpolicella wine value chains in Italy29
From homes to assets: Transcalar territorial networks and the financialization of build to rent in Greater Manchester29
Crops, claims and the politics of risk in India’s agricultural insurance programme28
Shifting baselines: From austerity to additionality in the mangrove forest28
Whither hydrocarbons? The rescaling of global oil and gas markets amidst COVID-19 and a contested transition28
On the need for caution in using ‘big data’ for built environment research: A response to Chng et al. (2024)28
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