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Faculty

Edward Feser

Professor & Interim Head of Urban & Regional Planning
PhD, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1997

Edward Feser teaches courses in state and local economic development policy, regional development theory, urban and regional analysis, and urban spatial structure. His research focuses on the forces influencing the growth, decline, economic adjustment, and industrial restructuring of cities and regions. He has published work on technology-oriented economic development, theories of industry clustering, industry cluster analysis methods, agglomeration economies and industrial productivity, migration and regional economic distress, regional influences on process technology adoption in manufacturing, and the improvement of data and spatial-analytical techniques for local development practice. Currently he is studying economic development policy making processes and the role that universities can play in assisting states and regions undertake strategic economic development planning.

Feser's research has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the World Bank, the U.S. Economic Development Administration, the Appalachian Regional Commission, and the German Marshall Fund of the United States, as well as multiple state and local agencies. He is involved in the development and operation of NEURUS—the Network for European-U.S. Regional and Urban Studies—a consortium of universities in the U.S., the Netherlands, Germany and Austria.

Feser taught at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for seven years prior to coming to UIUC in 2004. In 2003 he served as Assistant Secretary of the North Carolina Department of Commerce, where he acted as chief economist and senior policy advisor to the Secretary and directed the reorganization and expansion of the agency's Division of Policy, Research and Strategic Planning. He continues to work closely with state and local governments on issues related to his research and acts regularly as a consultant to the corporate sector, government, non-profit development agencies, and economic development planning firms.

Contact Information
111 Temple Hoyne Buell Hall, MC-619
611 Taft Drive
Champaign, IL 61820
Phone: 217.244.6767
Fax: 217.244.1717
E-mail: feser@uiuc.edu

Current Research Areas

  • Economic policy making at the state, regional and local levels
  • The forces influencing the growth, decline, economic adjustment, and industrial restructuring of cities and regions
  • Theories of industry clustering, industry cluster analysis methods, agglomeration economies and industrial productivity, migration and regional economic distress, regional influences on process technology adoption in manufacturing
  • The improvement of data and spatial-analytical techniques for local development practice

Selected Publications

Feser, E, H Renski, and H Goldstein. Forthcoming. Clusters and economic development outcomes: An assessment of the link between clustering and economic growth in Appalachia. Economic Development Quarterly.

Feser, E, H Renski, and J Koo. Forthcoming. Benchmark regional industry cluster analysis. In Targeting Regional Economic Development, edited by S Goetz, S Deller, and T Harris (London: Taylor and Francis).

Feser, E, and A Isserman. Forthcoming. The rural role in national value chains. Regional Studies.

Feser, E. Forthcoming. Detecting university-industry synergies: A comparison of two approaches in applied cluster analysis. In Universities and Regional Development: Success Factors and Potential for Failure, edited by A Varga (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar).

Feser, E. 2007. Clusters and the design of innovation policy for developing economies. In The Economics of Regional Clusters: Networks, Technology and Policy, edited by U Blien and G Maier, 191-213 (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar).

Feser, E. 2007. Globalization, regional economic policy and research. In Globalization and Regional Economic Modeling, edited by R J Cooper, K P Donaghy, and G J D Hewings, 107-130 (Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag).

Renski, H, Koo, J, and E Feser. 2007. Differences in labor versus value chain industry clusters: An empirical investigation. Growth and Change 38 (3): 364-395.

Feser, E. 2007. Linking research and rural development policy: An introduction to the special issue. Journal of Regional Analysis and Policy 37 (1): 1-3.

Feser, E. 2007. Encouraging local broadband deployment from the bottom up. Journal of Regional Analysis and Policy 37 (1): 69-72.

Goldstein, H, S Bollens, E Feser, and C Silver. 2006. An experiment in the internationalization of planning education: The NEURUS program. Journal of Planning Education and Research 25 (4): 349-63.

Feser, E J, and S H Sweeney. 2006. On the state of the geography in the US Bureau of Labor Statistics Covered Wages and Employment (ES-202) series. International Regional Science Review 29 (3): 247-63.

Feser, E, S Sweeney, and H Renski. 2005. A descriptive analysis of discrete U.S. industrial complexes. Journal of Regional Science 45 (2): 395-419.

Feser, E. 2005. Industry cluster concepts in innovation policy: A comparison of U.S. and Latin American experience. In Spillovers and Innovations: Space, Environment and the Economy, edited by G Maier and S Sedlacek, pp. 135-55 (Vienna, Austria: Springer-Verlag/Wien).

Selected Publications Available on the Web

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University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign • College of Fine and Applied Arts • Department of Urban & Regional Planning
111 Temple Buell Hall • 611 Taft Drive, Champaign, IL 61820 • (217) 333-3890 • E-mail: urbplan@uiuc.edu

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