Shrinking, ageing, disconnecting? The resilience of (some) Danish small towns

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportKonferenceabstrakt i proceedingsForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Shrinking, ageing, disconnecting? The resilience of (some) Danish small towns. / Fertner, Christian; Herslund, Lise Byskov; Carstensen, Trine Agervig; Groth, Niels Boje.

eBook of Abstracts: AESOP/ACSP Joint Congress 2013. Dublin, 2013. s. 961.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportKonferenceabstrakt i proceedingsForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Fertner, C, Herslund, LB, Carstensen, TA & Groth, NB 2013, Shrinking, ageing, disconnecting? The resilience of (some) Danish small towns. i eBook of Abstracts: AESOP/ACSP Joint Congress 2013. Dublin, s. 961, Joint AESOP/ACSP Congress 2013, Dublin, Irland, 15/07/2013. <http://aesop-acspdublin2013.com/uploads/files/AESOP-ACSP%20Congress%20Book%20of%20Abstracts.pdf>

APA

Fertner, C., Herslund, L. B., Carstensen, T. A., & Groth, N. B. (2013). Shrinking, ageing, disconnecting? The resilience of (some) Danish small towns. I eBook of Abstracts: AESOP/ACSP Joint Congress 2013 (s. 961). http://aesop-acspdublin2013.com/uploads/files/AESOP-ACSP%20Congress%20Book%20of%20Abstracts.pdf

Vancouver

Fertner C, Herslund LB, Carstensen TA, Groth NB. Shrinking, ageing, disconnecting? The resilience of (some) Danish small towns. I eBook of Abstracts: AESOP/ACSP Joint Congress 2013. Dublin. 2013. s. 961

Author

Fertner, Christian ; Herslund, Lise Byskov ; Carstensen, Trine Agervig ; Groth, Niels Boje. / Shrinking, ageing, disconnecting? The resilience of (some) Danish small towns. eBook of Abstracts: AESOP/ACSP Joint Congress 2013. Dublin, 2013. s. 961

Bibtex

@inbook{32d1ee4c47e149bb954c896ff0ab2581,
title = "Shrinking, ageing, disconnecting? The resilience of (some) Danish small towns",
abstract = "This paper is based on findings of a project investigating the challenges and prospects of Danish service towns with 1000 to 5000 inhabitants (Groth and Fertner 2013). Small towns in general are often associated with being losers of globalisation and suffering under urban and economic decline. Furthermore, in Denmark, many of these towns lost their municipal functions due to an administrative reform, carried out in 2007. However, several small towns seem to be resilient to a general decline. They have stable or even positive development in certain aspects of societal development like demography, participation and associations, or retail provision. They are not undergoing processes of shrinkage but rather of restructuring. In this paper we will analyse and discuss the factors underlying this development and conclude on relevant factors for social resilience.In particular we look at the development of 250 small towns in Denmark. We apply quantitative analyses of register data, showing the current demographic development of these towns. The first results show that many towns have a stable population development, though with an increasing share of the elderly. The analysis of service provision also shows the persistence of basic services in small towns, especially those located in the periphery. Of special importance is the retailing sector on the one hand concentrating non-food to larger cities but, on the other hand, locating shops focusing on daily commodities in small towns. In 6 case towns we analyse social networks, showing a wide variation of activity in local associations in the various towns. The associations and voluntary capital in the towns lay the foundation for what everyday life can be lived there as they organise common social events, cultural and sports. The associations can also play an important part in more development oriented issues as it is them that communicate with larger municipalities on issues of local concern and they fundraise through holding events for local activities and also for actual physical changes to take place in the towns.The current socio-economic geography of Denmark is characterised by an ongoing polarisation between two metropolitan areas and the peripheral areas of the country. The combination of demographic resilience, basic service provision, and local networks working with issues of quality of life might enable a future for some small towns, even if they are located peripheral to the big labour markets. We will discuss how far these approaches can enable a development which can withstand the general urban dynamics in Denmark.Reference: Groth, N. B. (ed.) 2013. Stationsbyernes situation, udfordringer og potentialer. En hvidbog (White book on the challenges and prospects of service towns). Centre of Strategic Urban Research.",
keywords = "Urban planning",
author = "Christian Fertner and Herslund, {Lise Byskov} and Carstensen, {Trine Agervig} and Groth, {Niels Boje}",
year = "2013",
language = "English",
pages = "961",
booktitle = "eBook of Abstracts",
note = "Joint AESOP/ACSP Congress 2013, AESOP/ACSP 2013 ; Conference date: 15-07-2013 Through 19-07-2013",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Shrinking, ageing, disconnecting? The resilience of (some) Danish small towns

AU - Fertner, Christian

AU - Herslund, Lise Byskov

AU - Carstensen, Trine Agervig

AU - Groth, Niels Boje

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - This paper is based on findings of a project investigating the challenges and prospects of Danish service towns with 1000 to 5000 inhabitants (Groth and Fertner 2013). Small towns in general are often associated with being losers of globalisation and suffering under urban and economic decline. Furthermore, in Denmark, many of these towns lost their municipal functions due to an administrative reform, carried out in 2007. However, several small towns seem to be resilient to a general decline. They have stable or even positive development in certain aspects of societal development like demography, participation and associations, or retail provision. They are not undergoing processes of shrinkage but rather of restructuring. In this paper we will analyse and discuss the factors underlying this development and conclude on relevant factors for social resilience.In particular we look at the development of 250 small towns in Denmark. We apply quantitative analyses of register data, showing the current demographic development of these towns. The first results show that many towns have a stable population development, though with an increasing share of the elderly. The analysis of service provision also shows the persistence of basic services in small towns, especially those located in the periphery. Of special importance is the retailing sector on the one hand concentrating non-food to larger cities but, on the other hand, locating shops focusing on daily commodities in small towns. In 6 case towns we analyse social networks, showing a wide variation of activity in local associations in the various towns. The associations and voluntary capital in the towns lay the foundation for what everyday life can be lived there as they organise common social events, cultural and sports. The associations can also play an important part in more development oriented issues as it is them that communicate with larger municipalities on issues of local concern and they fundraise through holding events for local activities and also for actual physical changes to take place in the towns.The current socio-economic geography of Denmark is characterised by an ongoing polarisation between two metropolitan areas and the peripheral areas of the country. The combination of demographic resilience, basic service provision, and local networks working with issues of quality of life might enable a future for some small towns, even if they are located peripheral to the big labour markets. We will discuss how far these approaches can enable a development which can withstand the general urban dynamics in Denmark.Reference: Groth, N. B. (ed.) 2013. Stationsbyernes situation, udfordringer og potentialer. En hvidbog (White book on the challenges and prospects of service towns). Centre of Strategic Urban Research.

AB - This paper is based on findings of a project investigating the challenges and prospects of Danish service towns with 1000 to 5000 inhabitants (Groth and Fertner 2013). Small towns in general are often associated with being losers of globalisation and suffering under urban and economic decline. Furthermore, in Denmark, many of these towns lost their municipal functions due to an administrative reform, carried out in 2007. However, several small towns seem to be resilient to a general decline. They have stable or even positive development in certain aspects of societal development like demography, participation and associations, or retail provision. They are not undergoing processes of shrinkage but rather of restructuring. In this paper we will analyse and discuss the factors underlying this development and conclude on relevant factors for social resilience.In particular we look at the development of 250 small towns in Denmark. We apply quantitative analyses of register data, showing the current demographic development of these towns. The first results show that many towns have a stable population development, though with an increasing share of the elderly. The analysis of service provision also shows the persistence of basic services in small towns, especially those located in the periphery. Of special importance is the retailing sector on the one hand concentrating non-food to larger cities but, on the other hand, locating shops focusing on daily commodities in small towns. In 6 case towns we analyse social networks, showing a wide variation of activity in local associations in the various towns. The associations and voluntary capital in the towns lay the foundation for what everyday life can be lived there as they organise common social events, cultural and sports. The associations can also play an important part in more development oriented issues as it is them that communicate with larger municipalities on issues of local concern and they fundraise through holding events for local activities and also for actual physical changes to take place in the towns.The current socio-economic geography of Denmark is characterised by an ongoing polarisation between two metropolitan areas and the peripheral areas of the country. The combination of demographic resilience, basic service provision, and local networks working with issues of quality of life might enable a future for some small towns, even if they are located peripheral to the big labour markets. We will discuss how far these approaches can enable a development which can withstand the general urban dynamics in Denmark.Reference: Groth, N. B. (ed.) 2013. Stationsbyernes situation, udfordringer og potentialer. En hvidbog (White book on the challenges and prospects of service towns). Centre of Strategic Urban Research.

KW - Urban planning

M3 - Conference abstract in proceedings

SP - 961

BT - eBook of Abstracts

CY - Dublin

T2 - Joint AESOP/ACSP Congress 2013

Y2 - 15 July 2013 through 19 July 2013

ER -

ID: 47263534