Scenarios about 'industrial geography'
The spatial distribution and organization of industrial activities and their relationship to natural resources, labor markets, and transportation networks. Industrial geography examines how manufacturing and production systems develop in particular locations, influenced by factors such as raw material availability, energy sources, market access, and government policies. Understanding these patterns helps explain regional economic development and provides context for how alternate industrial configurations might reshape societies and power dynamics in speculative timelines.
What If The North American Auto Industry Developed in Different Locations?
Exploring the alternate timeline where America's automotive manufacturing heartland emerged outside Detroit, reshaping the economic geography, labor movements, and urban development of the United States.