Multi-scalar geographies of polarisation and peripheralisation: A case study of Czechia
Multi-scalar geographies of polarisation and peripheralisation: A case study of Czechia
Author(s): Martin ŠimonSubject(s): Regional Geography, Socio-Economic Research
Published by: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Mikołaja Kopernika
Keywords: polarisation; peripheralisation; accessibility; inner peripheries; Central Europe;
Summary/Abstract: A key issue in socio-economic geography is to understand how regional and social polarization shapes the territorial organization of society. We argue that effects of polarization are not translated simply and straightforwardly in a whole region, but vary to a large extent with respect to different types of accessibility areas. We applied the time-accessibility framework to classify a territory into urban, peri-urban, rural, and remote rural areas at a national and regional scale. Subsequently, we computed comparative indicators for this territorial classification, measuring three dimensions of peripherality for a period of thirty years. The analysis illustrates how polarization and peripheralization works at a detailed spatial level. A case study of the Ústí region shows re-polarization and bi-polarization of the region in its path from socialist urbanization in the 1980s to regional peripheralization in 2011. The use of the time-accessibility framework allows to assess regional changes within long-term and broader changes of core-periphery relations at national level and thus allows for a better understanding of the different nature of socialist and post-socialist peripheries. Finally, the article offers methodical procedures and tools allowing for a comparable research of polarization and peripheralization. Thus, it is responding to the call for more comparative research of peripheral areas in Europe.
Journal: Bulletin of Geography. Socio-economic Series
- Issue Year: 2017
- Issue No: 37
- Page Range: 125-137
- Page Count: 14
- Language: English