Abstract

Different socioeconomic, historical, political, and cultural factors have influenced long-term settlement patterns and demographic structures in Europe. Southern Europe is considered a relatively homogeneous region as far as settlement characteristics and population dynamics are concerned. Within-country local variability in the spatial distribution of population is high, and inherent differences across countries may outline distinct demographic patterns at regional scale. A comparative, local-scale analysis of population distribution in five countries (Spain, Italy, Croatia, Greece, and Cyprus) over a relatively long time period (1961–2011) contributes to identify latent demographic trends in Mediterranean Europe at the spatial scale of Local Administrative Units (LAU). A spatially-explicit analysis of basic indicators of population density and demographic change allows identification of territorial disparities, reflecting local-scale settlement patterns common to different countries (e.g., population growth along coastal districts). These patterns consolidate a metropolitan hierarchy centered on large—mainly compact—cities and more dispersed conurbations along coastal areas. At the same time, the examined countries present different territorial contexts resulting in distinct population dynamics in turn influenced by internal (e.g., national policies, culture and local identity, class segregation) and exogenous (e.g., economic cycle, urbanization models) factors. A spatially-explicit analysis of demographic trends at local scale may contribute to rethinking urban strategies and adapting spatial planning to heterogeneous socioeconomic contexts across Europe.

Highlights

  • Local development and territorial disparities represent key issues in regional science [1]

  • While highly informative of current patterns and trends in local development, a comparative analysis of relevant socioeconomic and demographic attributes over a relatively long-time interval and detailed spatial scale is lacking for Europe [2,3,4,5,6]

  • Meeting the demand for local statistics, Eurostat has adopted a NUTS-compatible system of local administrative units (LAU)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Local development and territorial disparities represent key issues in regional science [1]. While highly informative of current patterns and trends in local development, a comparative analysis of relevant socioeconomic and demographic attributes over a relatively long-time interval and detailed spatial scale is lacking for Europe [2,3,4,5,6]. This kind of analysis is interesting in an economically-advanced region such as Europe, since individual countries exhibit distinctive characteristics deriving from their intrinsic socioeconomic structure, history, and political/cultural background [7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]. Regional changes in economic restructuring, demographic systems and urban sprawl patterns can have relevant consequences in terms of community marginalization, poverty, socio-spatial, and political imbalances [23,24,25]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call