28. Mai 2025

Benedikt Walker and Dr. Linus Kalvelage win JOEG Early Career Researcher Paper Prize 2024 Benedikt Walker and Dr. Linus Kalvelage win JOEG Early Career Researcher Paper Prize 2024

Benedikt Walker and Dr. Linus Kalvelage (university of Cologne) have won the 2024 JOEG Early Career Researcher Paper Prize for their study of Germany’s extraterritorial role in Namibia’s green hydrogen industry. Their paper reveals how states use de-risking, asset creation and market-building to steer global production networks, even in liberal economies. We warmly congratulate them on this prestigious award.

Restricted zone in Namibia where the green hydrogen project discussed in the article will be developed.
Restricted zone in Namibia where the green hydrogen project discussed in the article will be developed. © Benedikt Walker
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We are delighted to announce that Benedikt Walker, who recently earned his doctorate and is a member of our Economic Geography research group, and Dr. Linus Kalvelage, who is a researcher at the Department of Geography at the University of Cologne and served as Interim Professor at the Department of Geography in Bonn during the winter semester 2024/25, have jointly won the Journal of Economic Geography Early Career Researcher Paper Prize 2024 for their co-authored article “Strategic coupling beyond borders: Germany’s extraterritorial agency in Namibia’s green hydrogen industry.” This prestigious award honors papers whose authors completed their doctorates within seven years of acceptance; each recipient receives £200 of OUP books and a one-year online subscription to JOEG, all selected by the journal’s editorial team.

In their paper, Walker and Kalvelage explore how, amid mounting geopolitical threats, geo-economic competition, and climate-change imperatives, states reshape strategic coupling processes abroad. Focusing on Germany’s engagement in Namibia’s emerging green hydrogen sector, they conceptualize decarbonization as a state-led project that drives “extraterritorial agency.” By accompanying private enterprises with public institutional support, states enact three mechanisms—extraterritorial de-risking, asset creation, and market creation—that align global production networks with national objectives. Their findings show that even in liberal and coordinated market economies, extraterritorial strategies play a crucial role in advancing strategic goals overseas.

We warmly congratulate Benedikt Walker and Dr. Linus Kalvelage on this outstanding achievement and look forward to the continued impact of their research. 

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