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Invite colleaguesCivic action and urban shrinkage: Exploring the link
Abstract
In Europe, urban shrinkage is a widespread phenomenon with future relevance. To date, most academic and policy literature has explored the spatial impacts of this phenomenon, focusing on the infrastructure side (hardware), whereas social aspects of urban shrinkage (software) have been mostly overlooked. This paper indicates the gap regarding the software aspects of urban shrinkage. It examines the link between civic action and urban shrinkage, and finds that the concept of civic action is often promoted as a normative requirement for maintaining an area’s quality of life. In the authors’ view, social capital and civic action in the context of urban shrinkage could be valuable resources, but should not be overrated. In this respect, the authors identify and illustrate three scenarios of civic action in the context of urban shrinkage, namely (1) increased civic action, (2) no change in civic action and (3) reduced civic action. They conclude that a social theory of urban shrinkage is needed to give the debate on urban shrinkage a new impulse.
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Author's Biography
Maja Ročak is a researcher at the Dutch Centre of Expertise on Demographic Change Neimed. She is working on a PhD research at Radboud University, the Netherlands, on the topic of urban shrinkage and social capital.
Gert-Jan Hospers teaches economic geography at the University of Twente and has a special chair in place marketing at Radboud University, the Netherlands. He has published extensively on the urban and regional development of North West Europe.
Nol Reverda is a sociologist and full professor at Zuyd University of Applied Sciences, the Netherlands, where he runs a research centre on social integration. In addition, he is Scientific Director of the Dutch Centre of Expertise on Demographic Change Neimed.