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Geographies of International Business Travel in the Professional Service Economy.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Published

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Geographies of International Business Travel in the Professional Service Economy. / Faulconbridge, James R; Beaverstock, Jonathan V.
Mobility and technology in the workplace. ed. / Donald Hislop. London: Routledge, 2008.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Faulconbridge, JR & Beaverstock, JV 2008, Geographies of International Business Travel in the Professional Service Economy. in D Hislop (ed.), Mobility and technology in the workplace. Routledge, London.

APA

Faulconbridge, J. R., & Beaverstock, J. V. (2008). Geographies of International Business Travel in the Professional Service Economy. In D. Hislop (Ed.), Mobility and technology in the workplace Routledge.

Vancouver

Faulconbridge JR, Beaverstock JV. Geographies of International Business Travel in the Professional Service Economy. In Hislop D, editor, Mobility and technology in the workplace. London: Routledge. 2008

Author

Faulconbridge, James R ; Beaverstock, Jonathan V. / Geographies of International Business Travel in the Professional Service Economy. Mobility and technology in the workplace. editor / Donald Hislop. London : Routledge, 2008.

Bibtex

@inbook{cae25ed74df7472e81110d10c7c6f189,
title = "Geographies of International Business Travel in the Professional Service Economy.",
abstract = "the chapter focuses exclusively upon the international dimensions of business travel and proceeds as follows. Section one briefly illustrates contemporary patterns of business travel through an analysis of official data from the United Kingdom{\textquoteright}s Travel Trends (Office for National Statistics, 2007) and unofficial data, sourced from the European airline industry (Witlox et al, 2007). Sections two and three examine the way this proliferation in business travel supports the operation of globalizing professional service firms. Drawing on examples of how lawyers use business travel we show the topologies of social space opened up by occasional face-to-face encounter and how these are used to sustain working relationships and facilitate transnational business. This raises a number of important questions about the way geographies of business travel reproduce the global space economy, something that we address in the concluding section of the chapter.",
author = "Faulconbridge, {James R} and Beaverstock, {Jonathan V}",
year = "2008",
month = feb,
language = "English",
isbn = "978-0-415-44346-3",
editor = "Donald Hislop",
booktitle = "Mobility and technology in the workplace",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Geographies of International Business Travel in the Professional Service Economy.

AU - Faulconbridge, James R

AU - Beaverstock, Jonathan V

PY - 2008/2

Y1 - 2008/2

N2 - the chapter focuses exclusively upon the international dimensions of business travel and proceeds as follows. Section one briefly illustrates contemporary patterns of business travel through an analysis of official data from the United Kingdom’s Travel Trends (Office for National Statistics, 2007) and unofficial data, sourced from the European airline industry (Witlox et al, 2007). Sections two and three examine the way this proliferation in business travel supports the operation of globalizing professional service firms. Drawing on examples of how lawyers use business travel we show the topologies of social space opened up by occasional face-to-face encounter and how these are used to sustain working relationships and facilitate transnational business. This raises a number of important questions about the way geographies of business travel reproduce the global space economy, something that we address in the concluding section of the chapter.

AB - the chapter focuses exclusively upon the international dimensions of business travel and proceeds as follows. Section one briefly illustrates contemporary patterns of business travel through an analysis of official data from the United Kingdom’s Travel Trends (Office for National Statistics, 2007) and unofficial data, sourced from the European airline industry (Witlox et al, 2007). Sections two and three examine the way this proliferation in business travel supports the operation of globalizing professional service firms. Drawing on examples of how lawyers use business travel we show the topologies of social space opened up by occasional face-to-face encounter and how these are used to sustain working relationships and facilitate transnational business. This raises a number of important questions about the way geographies of business travel reproduce the global space economy, something that we address in the concluding section of the chapter.

M3 - Chapter

SN - 978-0-415-44346-3

BT - Mobility and technology in the workplace

A2 - Hislop, Donald

PB - Routledge

CY - London

ER -