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1

Liu, Wei, Yao Tong, Jing Zhang, Zuopeng Ma, Guolei Zhou et Yanjun Liu. « Hierarchical Correlates of the Shrinkage of Cities and Towns in Northeast China ». Land 11, no 12 (5 décembre 2022) : 2208. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/land11122208.

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The growth and shrinkage of cities and towns are normal phenomena in the evolution of regional town systems. The growth and shrinkage of different levels of cities and towns are mutually influential. This study uses ArcGIS and the Hierarchical Linear Model to analyze the hierarchical differences and correlations in the characteristics and mechanisms of shrinking cities and towns in Northeast China from 2000 to 2020. The results indicate that the shrinkage of cities and towns is characterized by hierarchical differences. High-level cities show widespread and slight shrinkage, while low-level towns show the most severe and continued shrinkage. The population shrinkage of cities and towns within the same municipality is not fully synchronized. In terms of spatial patterns, the multi-level relationship between cities and towns is divided into growth-driven, central siphon, peripheral growth, local growth, and global shrinkage. The shrinkage of high-level cities is mainly influenced by economic and industrial development and built-up environment. The shrinkage of low-level towns is constrained by population concentration, economic development, enterprise scale, local arable land resources, and environmental quality. Wages, jobs, and infrastructures in high-level cities have a strong siphoning effect on low-level towns, while technology and industrial development drive the population and economic development of low-level towns.
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Murthy, B. E. V. V. N. « Growth of Entrepreneurship in Small Towns ». SEDME (Small Enterprises Development, Management & ; Extension Journal) : A worldwide window on MSME Studies 13, no 4 (décembre 1986) : 1–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0970846419860401.

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3

Miao, Siyu, Yang Xiao et Ling Tang. « Urban Growth Simulation Based on a Multi-Dimension Classification of Growth Types : Implications for China’s Territory Spatial Planning ». Land 11, no 12 (5 décembre 2022) : 2210. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/land11122210.

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One of the primary aims of China’s territory spatial planning is to control the urban sprawl of local municipals and prevent regional competition and the negative consequences on the environment—which emphasizes the top-down spatial regulation. Indeed, the traditional cellular automaton (CA) model still has limitations when applied to the whole administration area since it may ignore the differences among cities and towns. Thus, this paper proposed a CM-CA (clustering, multi-level logit regression, integrated with cellular automaton) framework to simulate urban growth boundaries for cities and towns simultaneously. The significant novelty of this framework is to integrate several urban growth modes for all cities and towns. We applied our approach to the city of Xi’an, China, and the results showed satisfactory simulation accuracy of a CM-CA model for multiple cities and towns, and the clusters’ effects contributed 74% of the land change variance. Our study provides technical support for urban growth boundary delineation in China’s spatial planning.
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Antonova, Irina S., Evgeny A. Pchelintsev et Svetlana N. Popova. « Spatial clustering of single-industry towns and a dynamic model of economic growth ». Tyumen State University Herald. Social, Economic, and Law Research 5, no 4 (2019) : 138–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.21684/2411-7897-2019-5-4-138-154.

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This article studies the problems of economic growth and spatial development of regions with a high concentration of single-industry towns. The authors aim to identify the factors of development of single-industry towns at the microeconomic level on the basis of clustering and dynamic modeling of single-industry towns in three regions with the highest concentration — Kemerovo, Sverdlovsk, and Chelyabinsk Regions. This paper performs the clustering of single-industry towns by entropy indicators and the number of newly created enterprises, which allows distinguishing three “central” single-industry towns in each of the respective regions: Novokuznetsk, Nizhniy Tagil, and Magnitogorsk. The clustering of single-industry towns with the use of the population-normalized index of the number of newly created enterprises allows us to refer these cities to two different clusters: Novokuznetsk against Nizhniy Tagil and Magnitogorsk with different parameters dominating. The correlation analysis of aggregate revenue, fixed assets, the share of the single industry, the entropy of revenue, the number of newly created enterprises of three single-industry towns allows suggesting a dynamic regression model. The peculiarity of this model is the inclusion as a variable of the number of the newly created enterprises in Nizhniy Tagil for all the cities under consideration, as well as the inclusion of a dummy variable reflecting the year of introduction of the program for the development of single-industry towns. Using the bootstrap method for Novokuznetsk, the authors have confirmed the significance of the introduction of this variable. The results of the study have revealed both common patterns of regional development — the positive effect of reducing the share of monaurally and monocentric provision of single-industry towns in the regions for economic growth — and their differences — a contradictory effect of diversity in the central towns, as well as the assignment of Novokuznetsk and Nizhniy Tagil with Magnitogorsk from different clusters. In conclusion, the authors justify the early completion of the program of diversification of single-industry towns, designed to be ineffective in 2019.
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Kezeiri, S. K. « Population Growth of the Libyan Small Towns ». Libyan Studies 17 (1986) : 155–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s026371890000710x.

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AbstractThis paper addresses itself to the study of population growth of the small towns in Libya. The Libyan small towns have grown rapidly and it is expected that the majority will continue to grow in the future. Their growth can be attributed to natural increase, internal migration, the influx of foreigners, all of which have been stimulated by the State.
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Congdon, P., et J. Shepherd. « Modelling Population Changes in Small English Urban Areas ». Environment and Planning A : Economy and Space 18, no 10 (octobre 1986) : 1297–322. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/a181297.

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Research on urbanisation has been hampered by discrepancies between the administrative boundaries of towns and a meaningful spatial framework of urbanism that recognises both the true extent of the built-up areas of towns and the functional linkages between urban centres and their surrounding hinterland. An ‘urban area’ definition has been recently developed for British census statistics to represent the physical reality of urban boundaries in terms of land that is urban in use, whereas the functional approach to urban definition has been implemented in terms of a set of urban-centred labour-market areas. In this paper the spatial frameworks of physical and functional definitions are combined in order to investigate processes of population growth in small- and medium-sized towns in England between 1971 and 1981. As in other studies, a general tendency to counterurbanisation— higher growth rates for smaller urban areas (physically defined)—is demonstrated. However, a variety of types of ‘counterurbanisation’ also become apparent. In addition to growth of smaller towns in rural areas beyond metropolitan influence, there has been growth of towns in the labour-market areas of newer freestanding urban centres, and also in the decentralised commuter hinterlands of large metropolitan cores. In this paper a number of causal processes which may underlie different types of growth are investigated, setting this investigation within the standard and labour-market regional context of physical urban areas. There is evidence of ‘people-led’ growth in environmentally attractive locations (for example, through retirement migration). However, growth of small- and medium-sized towns also reflects employment decentralisation and deconcentration to freestanding or satellite towns, and the extension of commuter hinterlands linked both to a growth of car commuting and to availability of land for private-sector housing. Government policies encouraging growth are also demonstrated to be significant. Conversely, decline in a minority of small towns often indicates a diminishing employment base or policy restrictions on growth. The impact on modelling growth in urban areas of a diversity of causal processes and locational contexts for growth is considered.
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Mardiansjah, Fadjar H., Samsul Ma’rif et Agung Sugiri. « Analyzing Urban Population Growth in the Towns of Non-urban Regions in Java, Indonesia, Using Spatial Analysis ». IOP Conference Series : Earth and Environmental Science 1264, no 1 (1 novembre 2023) : 012012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/1264/1/012012.

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Abstract As a high densely populated region, urbanization process in Java has become a regional process as the process is also characterized by the growing out of the urban areas outside the cities’ administrative limit, as well as the rapid growth of urban population in the non-urban regions, known as kabupaten. This process is also indicated by the growth of many towns as urban areas in the territory of kabupaten. In fact, the growth of urban population in kabupaten has become the main contributors of urban population growth in Java in the last decades. By analysing the spatial growth of urbanized villages that form the towns in three kabupaten in the north coast of Central Java, this study aims to examine the characteristics of urban population growth in non-statutory towns in non-urban regions in order to deepening the understanding on urbanization process in high densely populated regions like Java. Urban population growth in the non-urban regions is analysed through a time series analysis on the growth of the towns in the territory of the kabupaten and the growth of the populations who live in the towns along the observation periods. The results show that urban population growth in non-urban region is influenced by rural-to-urbanized villages’ transformation process that triggers three forms of towns’ spatial formations for their growth and development: newly small-town formation process, growing process, and merging process. Therefore, this study suggests better management on the villages’ transformation proces, to have better management of regional urbanization in the future.
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Noble, M. « Growth and development in a regional urban system : the country towns of eastern Yorkshire, 1700–1850 ». Urban History 14 (mai 1987) : 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s096392680000852x.

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Throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as many as one-half of the urban inhabitants of England and Wales lived in small towns. In 1801 62 per cent of all towns with populations of 2,500 or more contained fewer than 5,000 inhabitants and in 1901 30 per cent of all towns still contained less than 10,000 persons. Yet despite the strength of small towns within the national urban system these communities are far from proportionately represented in the large body of academic literature directed towards analysing towns and urban growth. Our knowledge and understanding of the forces of change acting upon towns at the lower end of the urban size hierarchy in this critical transitional period of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries remains relatively undeveloped, and this is especially true for rural areas untouched by the main wave of industrialization.
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9

Gabe, Todd M. « Establishment Growth in Small Cities and Towns ». International Regional Science Review 27, no 2 (avril 2004) : 164–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0160017603262403.

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10

O'Neill, Karen M., Thomas K. Rudel et Melanie H. McDermott. « Why Environmentally Constrained Towns Choose Growth Controls ». City & ; Community 10, no 2 (juin 2011) : 111–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-6040.2011.01362.x.

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Growth controls and growth management are nearly as common as progrowth boosterism in parts of the United States. Growth machine and associated urban regime theories propose that mobilized, upper–income communities are most likely to pursue growth management. Yet other types of communities now also attempt to manage growth. To explain this anomaly, political economy approaches must be supplemented. We assess the explanatory power of the cultural landscape concept founded, in part, on conditions of the built and natural environment. We studied four towns ranging in income and in proportion of developed land in New Jersey's Highlands, a rural–urban fringe region. In three towns, including a lower–income farming town, policies evolved to interpret features like steep slopes or farms as posing barriers to intensive development. In revealing this interpretive shift, the cultural landscape concept complements political economy theories by explaining why even unlikely towns may choose to manage growth.
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11

Rahul, Rahul. « Growth of Urban Centres in a Hill State : A Case of Himachal Pradesh ». Scholars Journal of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences 10, no 10 (1 octobre 2022) : 453–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.36347/sjahss.2022.v10i10.001.

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An increase in the number of people living in towns and cities is referred to as urban expansion. It is the result of population concentration in reaction to the availability of a wide range of amenities and services in the city center. Himachal Pradesh, as India's least urbanized state, experienced a significant increase in the number of urban settlements between 1951 and 2011. Understanding the stages of urban development in a country/state can be aided by studying urban growth by size class of towns. As a result, the current paper is a modest attempt to look into Himachal Pradesh's urban growth by size class from 1951. It is based on data of the Census of India from 1951 to 2011. Himachal Pradesh's urban population increased by 4.5 times, from 1.53 lakh in 1951 to 6.88 lakh in 2011. The creation of new towns, which increased the overall number of towns to 59 in 2011 from 29 in 1901, is responsible for a substantial portion of the rise in urban population. The state's urbanization statistics suggest that the state's urban population is growing at a relatively slow pace. The prevalence of smaller towns can be seen in the structure pattern. The state has only one class I town, Shimla. Shimla's primacy among Himachal Pradesh's towns may be seen in the fact that the city accounts for approximately one fifth of the state's total urban population during the research period. In the districts of Kinnaur and Lahul Spiti, there are no towns; these districts are void of any urban population.
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Rubtsov, Gennadiy, et Aleksandr Litvinenko. « Development of single-industry towns as a factor of economic and regional growth ». E3S Web of Conferences 208 (2020) : 08005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202020808005.

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Single-industry towns occupy a special place in the system of regional economic development of Russia. To date, domestic practice has accumulated significant experience in the management of mono-profile areas. In fact, its own model of mono-education management, which includes an individual set of tools for socio-economic impact, has been developed. The institute of development of single-industry towns was formed into a complete system of tested mechanisms and organizational forms of their implementation. The basic directions of support of monoprofile territories are defined, the bodies of development of single-industry towns are created, the complex programs of development of monoformations are tested and adjusted. The process of development of mono-territories has passed to the “post-institutional” stage, when the system of institutions for single-industry towns management (Single-Industry Towns Development Fund), tested in practice, has been subjected to scientific and public criticism, and to date is able to effectively generate a qualitatively different level of influence on the socio-economic situation of cities of the mono-profile type.
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J. Gwaleba, Method. « Urban Growth in Tanzania : Exploring Challenges, Opportunities and Management ». International Journal of Social Science Studies 6, no 12 (20 novembre 2018) : 47. http://dx.doi.org/10.11114/ijsss.v6i12.3783.

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Tanzania cities and towns are rapidly urbanizing. This urbanization is manifest of rural-to-urban migration as well as natural population increase. The perceived lack of opportunities in rural areas has been identified as the main push factors for Tanzanians to move from rural areas to urban cities and towns. Urban management practice will increasingly need to account for direct and indirect impacts of urban growth in Tanzania cities and towns. The objective of this paper is to pinpoint the challenges and opportunities of the urban growth in cities and towns in Tanzania.The discussion of this paper is mainly based on critical review of the literature and original data derived from Baruti settlement in Dar es Salaam City. The review of the documents whether published or not published depended on its status to provide a critical analysis of urban growth challenges and opportunities in Tanzania. The Primary data were gathered using 79 using semi-structured interviews with both open and closed ended questions. The questionnaires were administered by the researcher through face-to-face sessions with the respondents. A purposive sampling technique was adopted in this study. The reason for selecting the purposive sampling technique was based on the respondents’ involvement in urban development project. The quantitative data collected through the use of questionnaire to supplement qualitative data were summarized and organized by using spread sheet template for detailed analysis. The critical qualitative analysis was built on both the secondary and primary data sources to addresses the research questions. A descriptive technique for data analysis was adopted where findings were represented in tables, graphs and texts.While unperfected urbanization surpass the way inhabitants interact and live in cities and towns, urban management addresses the social, economical and environmental challenges that emerge with the continued urbanization in Tanzania cities and towns such that human activities could be more socially liable, economically sound and environmentally friendly over a long period of time in the future.
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Liu, Yiguo. « Research on the Current Situation and Path of Development of Cultural Tourism Towns in China ». Frontiers in Business, Economics and Management 7, no 3 (1 mars 2023) : 183–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.54097/fbem.v7i3.5532.

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Since the reform and opening up, China's small towns have entered a stage of rapid development, and many provinces have started to carry out the creation of small towns with special characteristics, among which small towns with cultural and tourism characteristics have shown rapid growth and development. This kind of special town not only enhances the influence of regional tourism, but also well promotes the growth of regional economy. However, at the same time, many regions only emphasize the quantity and scale in the process of building cultural and tourism towns, but neglect the quality of town construction, so the development of cultural and tourism towns has also encountered some difficulties due to the utilitarian pursuit of maximum economic benefits.
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Chakrabarti, Saumyabrata, et Vivekananda Mukherjee. « Birth of Census Towns in India : An Economic Analysis ». South Asian Journal of Macroeconomics and Public Finance 9, no 2 (11 octobre 2020) : 139–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2277978720961190.

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In Indian census, the reclassification of villages as small towns (called census towns) has been startling during the decade 2001–2011 and accounted for almost 30 per cent of urbanization, which is significantly larger than their growth rate in previous decades. Though reclassified as towns, they are governed as rural settlements. This article applies urban economic theory along with rural–urban labour market dynamics to identify the factors behind the birth of census towns. It also attempts to empirically check the validity of some of the hypotheses of the theoretical model it develops by using data from the state of West Bengal during 2001–2011 where the growth rate of census towns had been one of the highest in India. It turns out that the higher formal sector income in the nearby urban centres with lower extent of urban sprawl is the major factor explaining the birth of census towns. JEL Classification: R11, R12, R23
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Barbieri, Elisa, Marco R. Di Tommaso, Chiara Pollio et Lauretta Rubini. « Industrial Policy in China : The Planned Growth of Specialised Towns in Guangdong Province ». Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 12, no 3 (5 octobre 2019) : 401–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cjres/rsz012.

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Abstract We analyse one of the most important policy experiences for industrial clustering in Southern China—the Specialised Towns programme—that has transformed some Chinese clusters into the backbone of global production chains. We offer a long-term, detailed overview of the policy programme and of Guangdong’s specialised towns, classifying them as endogenous or exogenous according to their features, and investigate their contribution to local growth and rebalancing. This analysis of the Specialised Towns programme contributes to the international debate on revisiting industrial policy and suggests that the discussion should conceive them as articulated processes to reach long-term societal objectives.
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BENGUIGUI, L., D. CZAMANSKI et M. MARINOV. « SCALING AND URBAN GROWTH ». International Journal of Modern Physics C 15, no 07 (septembre 2004) : 989–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0129183104006376.

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This paper presents an analysis of the growth of towns in the Tel Aviv metropolis. It indicates a similarity in the variation of populations so that the population functions can be scaled and superposed one onto the other. This is a strong indication that the growth mechanism for all these towns is the same. Two different models are presented to interpret the population growth: one is an analytic model while the other is a computer simulation. In the dynamic analytic model, we introduced the concept of characteristic time. The growth has two parts: in the first, the derivative is an increasing function, the town is very attractive and there is short delay between decision to build and complete realization of the process. At this time, there is no shortage of land. However, around a specific time, the delay begins to increase and there is lack of available land. The rate of the population variation decreases until saturation. The two models give a good quantitative description.
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Yang, Yang, Chunlu Liu, Baizhen Li et Jilong Zhao. « Modelling and Forecast of Future Growth for Shandong’s Small Industrial Towns : A Scenario-Based Interactive Approach ». Sustainability 14, no 24 (15 décembre 2022) : 16823. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su142416823.

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The industrial small-town development process in Shandong is influenced by the urban agglomeration strategy and the regional collaborative production, thereby resulting in a challenge of growth boundary planning. How to build a growth forecast decision support system to help small industrial towns maintain sustainable development with limited trial and error costs is an essential topic in the current research of small town-related fields. Empirical analysis reveals that the growth factors of small towns differ from the factors of cities due to the other-organization planning management system and self-organization construction activities that coexist in small towns. Besides, due to the size of small towns, the impact of policy changes in small towns is more significant than in cities. Furthermore, as part of the regional production chain, small industrial towns are most vulnerable to uncertain external disturbances. Therefore, it is necessary to formulate different development scenarios according to possible disturbances and output corresponding development forecasts. The research aims to build a decision-making support system for Shandong’s small-town planning based on an urban modeling approach using geographic information technology and scenario planning. Considering the mutually driving effects of the objective environment and subjective policies of Shandong’s industrial towns, as well as the corresponding dynamic mechanisms and comparing the theoretical basis and limitations of the different modeling approaches, this essay constructs a model system based on a mathematical model and a system dynamics model. It is also an interactive model accompanied by applicable rules and factors so that initial information and relevant development goals can be inputted into the model system to simulate the influence of different policies and identify the small industrial town growth scenarios.
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Woolf, D. R., et Alan Dyer. « Decline and Growth in English Towns 1400-1640. » Sixteenth Century Journal 28, no 1 (1997) : 198. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2543243.

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Palliser, D. M., et Alan Dyer. « Decline and Growth in English Towns, 1400-1640. » Economic History Review 45, no 4 (novembre 1992) : 796. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2597423.

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Krzysztofik, Robert, Iwona Kantor-Pietraga et Franciszek Kłosowski. « Between Industrialism and Postindustrialism—the Case of Small Towns in a Large Urban Region : The Katowice Conurbation, Poland ». Urban Science 3, no 3 (12 juillet 2019) : 68. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/urbansci3030068.

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The socio-economic transformation of (post)mining towns takes different forms and follows varied pathways. This obvious fact acquires a different significance in a region that is a polycentric urban conurbation whose growth was based on coal mining and industry. Particularly as concerns small towns, which are a minority in it in terms of numbers. This paper attempts to present the issue based on the cases of two small towns, Lędziny and Radzionków, located in the Katowice conurbation in southern Poland. While having similar mining origins, the towns currently represent two radically different paths of economic development. Both mentioned towns are developing relatively well. However, certain threats to their growth are also revealed: social functional, environmental and even political. A closer inspection of both is important in that the two small towns are examples of two extremities in the region, between which other types of towns undergoing socio-economic transformation are situated. The selected examples also indicate that a small (post)mining town does not necessarily have to be ‘the place that don’t matter’. Additionally, an important conclusion is that despite many objective barriers, a small town in a mining region can follow a line of development based on the industry 4.0 concept.
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Hebhoub, Nawel, et Abdelouhab Lekehal. « Urbanization in Algeria, the case of small towns : Azzaba, El Harrouche and Collo ». Geografická revue 19, no 2 (7 février 2024) : 17–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.24040/gr.2023.19.2.17-39.

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Algeria has experienced rapid urban growth. Since independence to the present day, the rhythm of this growth has varied from place to place and from time to time, creating an unbalanced urban structure. In an attempt to reduce or reestablish the much-coveted hierarchical and spatial balances, urban policies have focused on the less dense urban centers represented by small towns. The presented article analyzes the case of urbanization in Algeria in three small towns: Azzaba, El Harrouche and Collo, where we studied the urbanization rate, which varies between (0.9-2.54%), the rate of immigration to small towns (7.79-11.04%), equipment and shops.
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AKINFEEVA, Ekaterina V., et Mariya A. NIKONOVA. « Single-industry towns : Grouping and identification of factors influencing the demographic situation ». Regional Economics : Theory and Practice 21, no 6 (15 juin 2023) : 1034–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.24891/re.21.6.1034.

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Subject. This article considers single-industry towns of the Russian Federation as specific settlements. Objectives. The article aims to analyze the distribution of single-industry towns by category for 2014–2022, and model the rate of population change in single-industry towns. Methods. For the study, we used statistical, regression, and comparative analyses. Results. The article finds that social and economic factors, as well as the distance from a single-industry town to the capital of the region, affect the population growth of single-industry towns. Conclusions. The results of the study can be taken into account by government agencies when designing a strategy for the development of single-industry towns.
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Kryukova, O. G., et E. A. Asenova. « GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS IMPACT ON SINGLE-INDUSTRY TOWNS’ ECONOMY ». Strategic decisions and risk management, no 1 (6 février 2010) : 80–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.17747/2078-8886-2010-1-80-87.

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The problem of township-forming enterprises’ functioning has acquired strategic importance not only for towns and regions separately, but for Russian Economy in whole. Steady social and economic growth of single-industry towns depends on many factors. The article discusses reasons for crisis situations, business features of township-forming enterprises, opportunities for their growth. The necessity is being justified to define growth points amid crisis as well as in the post-crisis development.
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Bína, Jan. « The Czechoslovak Towns with Intensive Interrelations ». Geografie 96, no 1 (1991) : 27–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.37040/geografie1991096010027.

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The growth of regular sociogeographic relations among towns is a new feature of the settlement structure of Czechoslovakia. The paper deals with couples of towns, which show relatively advanced relations in mutual commuting both to work and to services.
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Akhmetova, Zauresh, Nataliya Tovma et Nursultan Shurenov. « ANALYSIS OF DEMOGRAPHIC TRENDS OF MONOCITIES IN EAST KAZAKHSTAN REGION ». Kazakhstan-Spectrum 107, no 3 (30 septembre 2023) : 85–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.52536/2415-8216.2023-3.06.

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The development of single-industry towns has been one of the main problems of Kazakhstan for many years. The depressive state of single-industry towns has worsened. This article is devoted to the development of the demographic potential of single-industry towns in the East Kazakhstan region of the Republic of Kazakhstan. The study used methods of comparison, matching, extrapolation, modeling, and benchmarking. Particular attention is paid to the analysis of the demographic indicators of single-industry towns in the East Kazakhstan region of Kazakhstan for 10 years. Based on the analysis carried out, a demographic forecast for the development of single-industry towns until 2030 was calculated. The factors influencing the development of the demographic potential of single-industry towns are determined. The authors attempted to calculate the index of demographic development of single-industry towns for 10 years, which shows the assessment of the settlements under consideration in terms of size and growth rate of demographic indicators and considers the balance of migration. An algorithm of actions for the development of single-industry towns is proposed.
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Zhu, Yuran. « Building Characteristic Sports Towns ». Journal of Finance Research 1, no 1 (16 octobre 2017) : 41. http://dx.doi.org/10.26549/jfr.v1i1.384.

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When advancing the construction new-type urbanization was put forward to being an important move of urban economic development in the following decade in the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, the characteristic towns' construction emerged as the times require. At the same time, the development of sports industry was lifted to a strategic height of national economic construction. This paper, taking the construction of characteristic sports town as the research object, with multiple research methods such as literature review method, case analysis method and expert interviews applied, makes "Building a Characteristic Sports Town" as the new economic growth pole of the development of sports industry, clearly analyzing the construction of sports town with PEST analytical method, which provides study and reference for opening up the new blue ocean for the economic development of sports industry.
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Valdivieso, Isabel Del Val. « Urban growth and royal interventionism in late medieval Castile ». Urban History 24, no 2 (août 1997) : 129–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926800016357.

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ABSTRACTThroughout the late Middle Ages, Castilian towns underwent a process of rapid economic and political growth which the monarchy sought to control. Accordingly, the monarchy reoriented its policies towards the towns. It attempted to impose the figure of the ‘corregidor’, the representative and defender of royal interests; it intervened wherever possible in the appointment of local government offices; it played its part in urban conflicts, alternately supporting opposing factions in an effort to take advantage of the situation and secure its own interests; and finally, the state established regulations governing economic activity. The process of royal intervention culminated under the Catholic monarchs (1474–1504) with what can be considered as a royal triumph.
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Reznikova, E. V. « THE ROLE OF SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED BUSINESSES IN THE SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF COMPANY TOWNS ». Strategic decisions and risk management, no 3 (29 octobre 2014) : 88–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.17747/2078-8886-2012-3-88-93.

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The development of small and medium enterprises (SME) plays an important role in the comprehensive modernization of the economy of single-industry towns, acting as a factor of its growth and diversification. The analysis of the dynamics of the development of SME of non-diversified municipal formations and directions of its state support was made, suggestions on the monitoring organization of statistical factors of SME in single-industry towns and on the development of comprehensive investment plans on modernization of single-industry towns were made in a part of the development and support of small and medium businesses in single-industry towns.
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Sołtys, Agnieszka Kwiatek. « Small towns in Poland - barriers and factors of growth ». Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 19 (2011) : 363–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sbspro.2011.05.143.

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Hassan Namangaya, Ally. « Determinants of Population Growth Trends for Tanzanian Small Towns ». Urban and Regional Planning 4, no 2 (2019) : 67. http://dx.doi.org/10.11648/j.urp.20190402.13.

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Kamińska, Wioletta, et Mirosław Mularczyk. « Development and Distribution of Private Microfirms in Mid-Size Polish Towns During the Transformation Period ». Miscellanea Geographica 12, no 1 (1 décembre 2006) : 175–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/mgrsd-2006-0021.

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Abstract The objective of the paper is to present the development and distribution of microfirms in mid-size Polish towns during the years of transformation of the political system. Research comprised towns with a population numbering from 20 thousand to 100 thousand inhabitants. According to the Central Office of Statistics reporting standards it is recognized that micro enterprises are economic entities employing up to nine people. Research has shown that a dynamic growth of microfirms took place during the transformation period in mid-size Polish towns. Majority of them came into being in towns with high tourism values located near border crossing points, along the main communication routes, on the edge of great urban-industrial agglomerations and towns located within special economic zones. On the other hand, the least number of microfirms were recorded in towns with less than 50 thousand inhabitants, usually peripherally located in a given voivodship.
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Praveen Lal C.S. et Sajini B. Nair. « Urbanization in Kerala—What Does the Census Data Reveal ? » Indian Journal of Human Development 11, no 3 (décembre 2017) : 356–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0973703018763241.

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Kerala’s recent urban growth rate has thrown open a challenge before the state government to cater the needs of the urban population and design programmes to provide basic facilities for a good standard of living. The authors here examine the growth trends in Kerala’s urban population, the tempo and degree of concentration and capture the changes in development indicators based on data available from the Census of India. The recent upsurge of 92.8 per cent urban growth rate in Kerala is due to the areal reclassification. The higher order towns (Classes I and II) in Kerala show a decline in growth of population, whereas the lower order towns (Class III towns) are growing. The urban density decreased and work participation rate increased slightly during 2001–2011. This phase of urbanization is characterized by the growth of a more dispersed population than concentrated urban centres. The steady increase in the rate of urbanization in Kerala, however, is accompanied by low pace of development, especially of basic amenities, which is a matter of concern that needs policy attention.
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Hu, Di. « Identification of Shrinking Cities on the Main Island of Taiwan Based on Census Data and Population Registers : A Spatial Analysis ». ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information 10, no 10 (14 octobre 2021) : 694. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijgi10100694.

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At the end of the 20th century, the phenomenon of urban shrinkage received widespread attention, with population decline as its core characteristic. In 2020, the Taiwanese population had negative growth and faced a low fertility rate and an aging population. This study used exploratory spatial data analysis to identify shrinking cities in Taiwan based on census data and population registers. The results indicated that Taiwan has 11 shrinking counties and 202 shrinking towns. Urban shrinkage occurred in the 1980s and continued from the suburbanization stage to the re-urbanization stage. Five types of spatial patterns in the 11 shrinking counties were observed. In the majority of the shrinking counties, towns with high population densities were unable to avoid shrinkage. A global spatial autocorrelation analysis indicated that shrinkage and non-shrinkage have become increasingly apparent at the town level since 2005. A local spatial autocorrelation analysis indicates that the spatial clustering of towns with population growth or decline from 2000 to 2020 has changed. Based on each town’s development, a two-step cluster analysis was conducted in which all towns were divided into four categories. Shrinking towns exist in each category, but with a different proportion. Based on the results of two-step cluster analysis combined with spatial analysis, this study discovered that both urbanization and suburbanization cause shrinkage in Taiwan, but the affected localities are distinct. For most shrinking counties, their spatial model indicates a relationship between shrinking and the urbanization of their towns. Keelung City and Chiayi City have the most potential to reverse the shrinkage. This study helps authorities better manage growth and implement regional revitalization.
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NIKONOVA, Mariya A., et Ekaterina V. AKINFEEVA. « Forecasting the demographic situation in single-industry towns of the Russian Federation ». Regional Economics : Theory and Practice 21, no 4 (17 avril 2023) : 699–728. http://dx.doi.org/10.24891/re.21.4.699.

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Subject. This article explores the problem of labor resources in single-industry towns of Russia. Objectives. The article aims to develop forecast scenarios for changes in the demographic situation in single-industry towns of Russia. Methods. For the study, we used statistical, regression, and scenario analyses. Results. The article finds that various factors contribute to the growth of the population of single-industry towns, such as the expansion of housing construction, increasing the availability of health services, the development of trade, etc. Conclusions. The development of Russia's single-industry towns requires long-term investment in production, and diversification of the economy is also necessary.
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36

Rudin, Ronald. « Land Ownership and Urban Growth : The Experience of Two Quebec Towns, 1840-1914 ». Urban History Review 8, no 2 (13 novembre 2013) : 23–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1019376ar.

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The Quebec towns of Sherbrooke and Sorel both offered certain attractions for economic development in 1840. Sorel was located at the junction of two major rivers, while Sherbrooke offered considerable water power to industry. Nevertheless, between 1840 and 1914 Sherbrooke grew much more rapidly than Sorel. The nature of land ownership was an important factor in differentiating the experiences of the two towns. Sorel's most valuable lands were tied up by a succession of government agencies, while the best lands in Sherbrooke were owned by a private land company eager to encourage development.
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Reyes, Fermín Leonel, Marco Antonio Piña Sandoval, Jorge Rogelio Zenteno Domínguez et Montserrat Piña Cárdenas. « Economic growth and human development in the Magic Towns and Charming Towns of the State of Mexico ». Scientific Journal of Applied Social and Clinical Science 3, no 11 (1 juin 2023) : 2. http://dx.doi.org/10.22533/at.ed.2163112331053.

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Waddington, Shelagh B. « Changing life in the towns of north Kildare ». Irish Geography 33, no 1 (23 décembre 2014) : 74–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.55650/igj.2000.304.

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This paper examines the growth and changes in population characteristics and lifestyle in three towns in north Kildare which have come increasingly within the influence of the Dublin Metropolitan area. The data used are primarily obtained from three surveys carried out in the towns during recent years and contrasts are made with previous work in the area. It is suggested that community life still exists in these towns but that the effects of proximity to Dublin are having ever greater impact on that life.
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Jyh-Hang, Shyng. « Research on Local Characteristic Industry Construction in Characteristic Towns under Public-Private Partnership Development Mode ». SHS Web of Conferences 178 (2023) : 03020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/202317803020.

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In recent years, there’s been a global trend of emphasizing the role of local characteristics in steering economic growth. To foster the advancement of local characteristic industries in characteristic towns, the public-private partnership (PPP) model is being adopted. This strategy leverages social resources and governmental incentives to drive both urban and rural progress, thus becoming a silver bullet to bolster the growth of characteristic towns. However, achieving “town-industry integration” and “sustainable development” necessitates shared consensus and understanding among all stakeholders. Given the intricate nature of the PPP mechanism, a comprehensive theoretical framework tailored to Chinese local characteristics is essential. This study scrutinizes the integration of the PPP model into characteristic industries within small Chinese towns. It follows a framework encompassing theoretical characteristics, feasibility analysis, existing problems, countermeasures, and recommendations, as well as future trends. The study employs both inductive reasoning and comparison. The research findings serve to establish a theoretical consensus for the PPP model’s integration with characteristic industries in these towns, benefiting all involved parties.
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Stobart, Jon. « An eighteenth-century revolution ? Investigating urban growth in north-west England, 1664–1801 ». Urban History 23, no 1 (mai 1996) : 26–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926800011664.

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The briefest inspection of the English urban hierarchy during the long eighteenth century reveals this as a period of immense change. However, regional analysis of the temporal and spatial patterns of these pre-census developments relies on using a variety of non-demographic sources to produce a series of urban demographic ‘snap-shots’ of the urban population. Employing this ‘demographic photography’ in early modern northwest England allows detailed investigation of the dynamics of the entire urban system. This reveals the deep roots of urban development in the region and points to an eighteenth-century urban revolution. Towns grew faster than the overall population, but this growth was unevenly distributed; both large and small towns exhibited strong and weak growth, making changes in the urban hierarchy inevitable and far-reaching. The most notable trend was the changing geography of the system: Cheshire towns grew far less rapidly than their increasingly industrial neighbours in Lancashire and the urban locus underwent a definite shift northwards. The fact that the urban patterns of growth appear to have preceded the period of maximum industrial growth by some forty to fifty years forces us to rethink the relationship between industrial and urban development.
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Bocharov, Sergei, et Andrey Maslovskiy. « Some Reflections about the Evolution of Golden Horde Towns ». Stratum plus. Archaeology and Cultural Anthropology, no 6 (décembre 2022) : 319–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.55086/sp226319329.

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The paper presents the regularities in the evolution of the Golden Horde towns. The authors proposed a scheme of periodization of emergence and existence of the Golden Horde towns, which takes into consideration the third component of the Golden Horde — sedentary rural settlements — and consists of seven stages. The 1 st stage (1240 s —1260 s) was the emergence of a large number of settlements in the steppe zone and reconstruction of the settlement structures in the regions with an already developed network of rural settlements (Volga’s Bulgaria, Trans Kuban Region, Crimea). The 2 nd stage (1260 s —1290 s) was the period of the Golden Horde towns’ creation as one of the main manifestations of the sovereignty of the new State. The 3 rd stage (1290 s —1340 s) is the period of continuous growth of towns, when the number of population and territories increased many times. Stage 4 (1340 s —1350 s): a halt in the growth of the majority of the main towns of the Golden Horde, with a few exceptions. Stage 5 (1360 s —1370 s) “Great Troubles”: gradual fading of the world of Golden Horde towns. Stage 6 (1380 s —1390 s): a weak attempt of Tokhtamysh Khan to revive economic life in the main Golden Horde towns. Stage 7 (1390 s —1420 s): final death of sedentary life in the main steppe territory of the Golden Horde. The authors see the reason for the disappearance of both the Golden Horde state itself and the phenomenon of its urbanization in the preservation of nomadic pastoralism by the ethnic groups that constituted the military and political elite of the Golden Horde, which led to irremovable contradictions and flaws in the economic and social structure of the State.
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42

Guaralda, Mirko, Greg Hearn, Marcus Foth, Tan Yigitcanlar, Severine Mayere et Lisa Law. « Towards Australian Regional Turnaround : Insights into Sustainably Accommodating Post-Pandemic Urban Growth in Regional Towns and Cities ». Sustainability 12, no 24 (15 décembre 2020) : 10492. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su122410492.

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The COVID-19 pandemic has made many urban policymakers, planners, and scholars, all around the globe, rethink conventional, neoliberal growth strategies of cities. The trend of rapid urbanization, particularly around capital cities, has been questioned, and alternative growth models and locations have been the subjects of countless discussions. This is particularly the case for the Australian context: The COVID-19 pandemic heightened the debates in urban circles on post-pandemic urban growth strategies and boosting the growth of towns and cities across regional Australia is a popular alternative strategy. While some scholars argue that regional Australia poses an invaluable opportunity for post-pandemic growth by ‘taking off the pressure from the capital cities’; others warn us about the risks of growing regional towns and cities without carefully designed national, regional, and local planning, design, and development strategies. Superimposing planning and development policies meant for metropolitan cities could simply result in transferring the ills of capital cities to regions and exacerbate unsustainable development and heightened socioeconomic inequalities. This opinion piece, by keeping both of these perspectives in mind, explores approaches to regional community and economic development of Australia’s towns and cities, along with identifying sustainable urban growth locations in the post-pandemic era. It also offers new insights that could help re-shape the policy debate on regional growth and development.
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43

Shabel`nikova, S. I. « SPECIFIC FEATURES OF SINGLE-INDUSTRY TOWNS’ DEVELOPMENT IN THE RUSSIAN FAR EAST ». Federalism, no 1 (29 juillet 2019) : 172–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.21686/2073-1051-2019-1-172-182.

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The main specific feature of single-industry towns is the dependence of their socio-economic development on the financial situation of the city-forming enterprise (group of enterprises). This enterprise is responsible not only for the filling of the budget, but also for the social situation in the single-industry town. So unemployment in single-industry towns has negative consequences not only for these settlements (reduction of the tax base and the quality of life of the citizens, subsidizes’ depending budgets, the growth of crimes, etc.), but also poses a threat to social and political stability throughout the country. The article considers the current problems of single-industry towns’ the development in the Russian Federation, as well as the specific features of single-industry towns in the Far East; reflects the assessment of the measures undertaken and inserts the proposals, concerning the necessary of support to single-industry towns in general and in the Far East, in particular.
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Mitra, Arup, et Sabyasachi Tripathi. « Rural Non-farm Sector : Revisiting the Census Towns ». Environment and Urbanization ASIA 12, no 1 (25 février 2021) : 148–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0975425321990324.

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The last decade (2001–2011) has witnessed a surge in the number of census towns (CTs) in India, which account for 30% of the country’s urban growth. Though several studies have tried to understand the spatial patterns and factors determining the emergence of these CTs, the all India level has been neglected. Due to an increase in non-farm activities, villages have been transformed into CTs. By considering 2,328 CTs at the all India level, this article investigates the relevant economic determinants of such transformation. To group similar CTs we use cluster analysis by considering several factors such as the size of the population of CTs, rural specific changes, climatic conditions, the growth dynamics of large cities which may spill over to rural hinterland, economic potential, the availability of infrastructures and job opportunities. The analysis suggests that the availability of infrastructure and the growth dynamics of the large cities are important for the emergence of these CTs, whereas rural poverty and unemployment rates do not seem to matter significantly. Finally, we suggest that for higher economic development, the rural to urban transformation is essential. For this purpose, the new CTs can offer an opportunity for increasing non-farm activities and the overall prospects for India. Hence, the policy directives will have to address the requirements of the CTs to emerge as centres of growth.
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Bogdański, Marcin. « Changes in the functional structure of small towns in the least developed regions of Poland ». HUMAN GEOGRAPHIES – JOURNAL OF STUDIES AND RESEARCH IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY 15, no 2 (30 novembre 2021) : 185–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.5719/hgeo.2021.152.4.

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The main objective of this work was to describe the functional structure of small towns located in the least-developed Polish voivodships (the so-called eastern Polish wall) and its changes between 2008 and 2018. An additional goal was to measure the diversification level of the functions performed by these towns. The results show that the structure of functions performed by small towns in eastern Poland was relatively uncompetitive and characterized by high stability over time. The structure was dominated by functions related to non-market services and industry, which in their case do not generate high added value. The studied structures were also relatively homogenous. The combination of such features in the long term may slow down the economic growth of the surveyed towns and regions in which they are located.
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Kaur, Daljit. « IQtadari System and the Growth of Towns in Medieval India ». India Quarterly : A Journal of International Affairs 46, no 2-3 (avril 1990) : 188–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/097492849004600205.

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Nhlapo, M. S., H. Kasumba et T. M. Ruhiiga. « Growth Challenges of Homeland Towns in Post-Apartheid South Africa ». Journal of Social Sciences 29, no 1 (octobre 2011) : 47–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09718923.2011.11892954.

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Ma, Laurence J. C., et Ming Fan. « Urbanisation from Below : The Growth of Towns in Jiangsu, China ». Urban Studies 31, no 10 (décembre 1994) : 1625–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00420989420081551.

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Manaeva, Inna, Alexandra Kanishcheva et Anna Tkacheva. « Determinants of City Growth in Russia ». Regionalnaya ekonomika. Yug Rossii, no 4 (décembre 2020) : 39–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.15688/re.volsu.2020.4.4.

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Today in Russia there are 1120 cities that are located in the territories with varying degrees of concentration. In the federal districts and regions of the Russian Federation, there is a wide disparity not only in the size of cities, but also in their growth rates. At a decrease in the population in small cities, there is an increase in big towns and cities with more than one million inhabitants. This trend shows the “attraction” of the population from regions into capital cities. The aim of the article is to assess the effects of factors that can influence the growth of a city in the Russian Federation. The scientific novelty of the research consists in the analysis of the influence of external (infrastructure, security) and internal (economic, social, infrastructure, human capital, environmental situation) factors on the growth of cities. The paper presents a system of factor indicators of urban growth. Cities of different sizes have different levels of life standard, and therefore author’s methodology was tested in terms of urban sizes: towns, medium-sized cities, large cities, million-plus cities. The significant factors in the growth of millionplus cities in the Russian Federation are the initial population size and average monthly wages. The growth in the population of large cities is negatively affected by the spatial concentration of industrial enterprises. A high level of average monthly wages contributes to an increase in the population of this type of cities. A significant positive impact on the growth of large cities depends on the concentration of mining industry, volume of investments in fixed assets, number of doctors. The concentration of mining industrial production has a positive effect on the basic growth rate of medium-sized cities. The concentration of manufacturing and the volume of investment in fixed assets have a significant positive effect on the growth of small towns. The practical significance of the obtained results consists in the possibility of creation of a methodological toolkit for the assessment of urban systems of the region, which can become the basis for the development of an algorithm for the strategic planning of the spatial development of cities in the Russian Federation.
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Mohmad Shukri, Sharyzee, Mohammad Hussaini Wahab et Nurul Jamala. « The Architectural Concept of Malay Royal Town ». Journal of Design and Built Environment 21, no 3 (31 décembre 2021) : 52–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.22452/jdbe.vol21no3.4.

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For the king or sultan-ruled states category, the Malay Royal towns are portrayed to be the most prominent town in the sultanate of Malay's administration structures. Apart from that, the Malay Royal Town has also been categorised as a historic town, representing the position and significance of the Malay sultanate hierarchy, dating back to the 16th century. This study's objective focuses on describing the idea of Malaysia’s Malay Royal Town, which has founded the identity and image along with the elements in the tangible and intangible category that substantiates sustainability following the rapid urban development in operation where nearly all the Royal Towns of Malaysia are involved. Multiple case studies have been conducted in Malay Royal towns throughout Malaysia are Arau, Alor Setar, Kuala Kangsar, Klang, Seri Menanti, Muar, Pekan, Kuala Terengganu and Kota Bharu. In order to understand and define the concept and structure of Malay Royal towns in Malaysia, the research method adopted includes site observation, historical map overlay and semi-structured interviews. Results obtained from the research indicated that the Royal Towns of Malay had taken a major role in influencing the history and growth of the towns as they are replete with identity and cultural values. Therefore, there is a need for the Malay Royal towns’ concept to be explored and appreciated by the nation so that all the distinctive elements and culture present within the Malay Royal towns can be retained for the knowledge of generations to come.
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