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last edited by BillSeitz on Oct 25, 2008 7:15 pm

[Emily Eakin] on the (members of ? not necessarily) model of . "You cannot get a technologically innovative place unless it's open to weirdness, eccentricity and difference." As the article notes, this group was identified decades ago. placed 9th on his index: I think per-capital measures are biased against huge cities - I think there's a need to hit a critical mass of a group, but that's in either portion-of-population or in raw numbers. [Robert Cushing] was hired by the Austin American-Statesman to test various models. (See series and list of researchers.) He found the creative model performed better than the model (see rebuttal by Putnam) and the [Edward Glaeser] [Human Capital] model. But his summary of the human-capital problem seems lame: "There are more than 100 university communities, and only 20 cities stand out as places in which it would appear that high-tech development is quite outstanding." Do all 100 of those universities have strong tech departments, or are some of them fuzzy lit-crit towns? The latter would probably have a negative economic outcome ("oh, why bother excelling, it's just a social construct"). Can't find enough detail yet. But his points about cities which fail to embrance the seems to echo my concerns.


 




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