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The New York region's post-September 11 economic geography
James W. Hughes
, Marla K. Nelson
Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, John J. Heldrich Ceter for Workforce Development
Rutgers, The State University
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
5
Scopus citations
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Keyphrases
New York
100%
Manhattan
100%
September 11
100%
Economic Geography
100%
Corporate
50%
Telecommunications
50%
Core Sites
50%
Market Space
50%
Office Space
50%
Human Losses
50%
High Activity
50%
Jersey City
50%
Physical Resources
50%
Terrorist Attacks
50%
Human Resources
50%
Metropolitan Regions
50%
World Trade Center
50%
Highway Infrastructure
50%
Decentralization
50%
Rail Line
50%
Lower Manhattan
50%
Business Continuity
50%
Physical Disruption
50%
Financial Firms
50%
Decentralized Framework
50%
Location Strategy
50%
Distributed Workplaces
50%
Back Office
50%
Economic Decentralization
50%
Social Sciences
Metropolitan Region
100%
International Trade
100%
Terrorist Action
100%
Economic Geography
100%
Telecommunication
100%
Economics, Econometrics and Finance
International Economy
100%