Abstract
This study estimates demographic resilience in local socioeconomic systems of Southern Europe using long-term population dynamics. We assume attractive places with a continuously expanding (resident) population as ‘demographically resilient’, and locations experiencing a persistent decline of population as more fragile to external shocks. Based on these premises, a comprehensive assessment of demographic resilience in more than 1000 municipalities along the urban–rural gradient in Greece, a Mediterranean country with marked regional disparities, was carried out between 1961 and 2011. Municipalities were considered representative of homogeneous local communities, especially in rural areas. The results of non-parametric correlations suggest how basic geographical gradients (coastal–inland and urban–rural) have significantly influenced the demographic resilience of Greek municipalities. These findings outline two contrasting spatial patterns that reflect (i) continuous expansion of peri-urban local communities and (ii) a particularly intense rural shrinkage, linking depopulation to land abandonment and scarce accessibility of inland districts. While long-term population growth in Greece has progressively re-shaped the intrinsic divide in urban and rural areas, the traditional gap in central and peripheral districts is still reflected in the spatial polarization between the ‘demographically resilient’, socially dynamic coastal locations and the ‘demographically fragile’ inland, economically marginal places. These results indicate the persistence of a center–periphery model characterizing long-term settlement expansion in Greece, with spatial patterns delineating ‘resilient’ and ‘fragile’ districts based essentially on infrastructures, accessibility, and amenities.
Highlights
Analysis of socioeconomic systems’ complexity focuses on the intrinsic dynamics characteristic of highly open, internally heterogeneous, and relationally linked local communities [1,2,3,4]
Assuming the possible non-linear relationship between these two dimensions, we introduced a simplified classification of the level of demographic resilience based on four categories distinguishing characteristic, long-term population dynamics [85,87]
Assuming local communities as complex adaptive systems, this study focused on ‘demographic resilience’ as a key dimension of socioeconomic resilience in local systems
Summary
Analysis of socioeconomic systems’ complexity focuses on the intrinsic dynamics characteristic of highly open, internally heterogeneous, and relationally linked local communities [1,2,3,4]. To evaluate such dynamics, interpretative frameworks oriented towards Complex Adaptive System (CAS) thinking were proposed and widely used in practice [5,6,7]. Interpretative frameworks oriented towards Complex Adaptive System (CAS) thinking were proposed and widely used in practice [5,6,7] This paradigm assumes the inseparability and intertwined functioning of local socioeconomic systems, a nonlinear linkage among their basic components, and the Systems 2020, 8, 34; doi:10.3390/systems8030034 www.mdpi.com/journal/systems. Resilience explicitly (or implicitly) depends on different territorial forces [12,13,14], whose impact is, in turn, reflected in the spatial organization of a given region or district [15,16,17,18]
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