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Institutional change of the 1990s in port sectors worldwide has been followed by the emergence of port investing/operating transnational corporations (TNC): firms operating container terminals across various regions, countries or continents. These fundamental changes coincide with a dramatic spatial shift with the Pacific Basin now host to the world s largest container ports as well as the world s leading port investors. A small number of powerful TNCs have become the leading agents of change. This book outlines an economic geography of these emerging transnational firms. It is the first…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Institutional change of the 1990s in port sectors worldwide has been followed by the emergence of port investing/operating transnational corporations (TNC): firms operating container terminals across various regions, countries or continents. These fundamental changes coincide with a dramatic spatial shift with the Pacific Basin now host to the world s largest container ports as well as the world s leading port investors. A small number of powerful TNCs have become the leading agents of change. This book outlines an economic geography of these emerging transnational firms. It is the first comprehensive effort to conduct an analysis of globalisation forces in the container port industry at a firm-level. Given their rapid ascent to the industry's top ranks, emphasis is placed on Asian TNCs. Core components of the internationalisation process are considered: spatial strategy, foreign market entry processes, organisational change, state-TNC relations, inter-corporate relations, logistical strategies and policy outcomes are analysed and their theoretical implications explored.
Autorenporträt
Daniel Olivier obtained a Ph.d. in economic geography from the University of Hong Kong in 2006. He has published on the topics of container ports, logistics, and Asian transnational firms in a number of books and academic journals. He joined Transport Canada in 2006 where he is currently working on port performance measurement.