Most location investments in retailing are frequently viewed as resulting from a combination of objective site assessments and decisions by individual organizations. They are also influenced, however, by the relationships between retailers, developers, financiers and planners,among others. Such “inter‐organizational networks” are formed by a variety of mechanisms–structural links, investments, personnel movements and sentiment relations–and can be of mutual benefit to concerned parties,acting as a form of social regulation on their decisions and activities. Examines the apparent locational implications of such networks by reference to the oligopolistic structure of the shopping mall sector in Canada where the system seems to have developed into a highly controlled and mature market with little evidence of aggressive locational competition between organizations (in terms of siting new malls). Concludes that such joint stewardship of resources by developers and retailers might offer useful lessons for more sustainable retail development in the UK.
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1 September 1994
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Retail and Distribution Management
Research Article|
September 01 1994
Interorganizational Networks and Location Investment Decisions: A Canadian Example Available to Purchase
Ian Clarke;
Ian Clarke
Senior Lecturer in the Department of Retailing and Marketing at the Manchester Metropolitan University. He is also Course Organizer for the Allied Domecq Retailing Postgraduate Diploma in Retail Management.
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Alan Hallsworth
Alan Hallsworth
Director of the Service Industries Research Centre and Senior Lecturer in the Department of Geography at the University of Portsmouth. He has specific research interests in retail development and Canadian retailing and has published extensively.
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2396-9083
Print ISSN: 0307-2363
© MCB UP Limited
1994
Retail and Distribution Management (1994) 22 (6): 38–45.
Citation
Clarke I, Hallsworth A (1994), "Interorganizational Networks and Location Investment Decisions: A Canadian Example". Retail and Distribution Management, Vol. 22 No. 6 pp. 38–45, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/09590559410070277
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