The small city in the urban system: complex pathways of growth and decline

IF 1.7 4区 社会学 Q2 GEOGRAPHY
Katrin Grossmann, A. Mallach
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

To paraphrase an old saying attributed, probably erroneously, to Abraham Lincoln, God must love small cities, because he (or she) made so many of them. By whatever reasonable definition, they vastly outnumber large cities in almost every country and contain significant shares of each nation’s population. While Germany has three cities of over one million population, and 96 between 100,000 and 1 million, it has 1518 cities between 10,000 and 100,000, which contain 42 percent of the country’s population. In much smaller Hungary, only Budapest, the national capital, has a population over 1 million, while there are seven cities between 100,000 and 1 million, and 137 between 10,000 and 100,000, containing roughly one-third of that nation’s population. It seems clear that small cities are a significant part of the urban system. Research on small cities, defined for our purposes here as those between 10,000 and 100,000 population, is not completely absent from the social scientific literature; moreover, there is some evidence that attention to them is growing, as witness this special issue as well as a recent symposium in City & Community (Ocejo, Kosta, and Mann 2020). That said, there is ample evidence that they have not received attention reflecting their scale in the urban system. Notably, OforiAmoah ironically entitled his book on the subject Beyond the Metropolis: Geography as if Small Cities Mattered (2007), while Atkinson has written more recently that ‘the vast majority of contemporary research and policy development has concentrated in large cities and metropolitan regions [...] within the context of globalizing forces and international competition’ (Atkinson 2019). Wagner and Growe flatly state that ‘Small and medium-sized cities, which are considered to be neither agglomerations nor metropolitan areas nor located in remote rural areas, have been largely ignored in research’ (2021, 106). We would suggest that much of this relative neglect arises from the perception by scholars that, while there may be a great many small cities, they are not particularly interesting; that is, that small cities fail to offer the sort of serious questions about urbanization and change that matter to scholars; as Ocejo et al. suggest
城市体系中的小城市:复杂的成长与衰落路径
套用一句被认为是亚伯拉罕·林肯(Abraham Lincoln)说过的老话,上帝一定喜欢小城市,因为是他(或她)创造了这么多小城市。无论按照何种合理的定义,几乎每个国家的城市人口都远远超过大城市,而且每个国家的人口中都有很大一部分是城市人口。德国人口超过100万的城市有3个,10万至100万的城市有96个,但人口在1万至10万之间的城市有1518个,占全国人口的42%。在小得多的匈牙利,只有首都布达佩斯的人口超过100万,而10万至100万人口的城市有7个,1万至10万人口的城市有137个,约占全国人口的三分之一。很明显,小城市是城市系统的重要组成部分。对小城市的研究,在这里被定义为人口在1万到10万之间的城市,在社会科学文献中并非完全缺失;此外,有证据表明,人们对它们的关注正在增加,正如本期特刊以及最近在城市与社区(Ocejo, Kosta, and Mann 2020)举行的研讨会所见证的那样。也就是说,有充分的证据表明,他们没有得到重视,反映出他们在城市系统中的规模。值得注意的是,OforiAmoah讽刺地将他的书命名为“超越大都市:小城市重要的地理学”(2007),而Atkinson最近写道,“绝大多数当代研究和政策发展都集中在大城市和大都市区……]在全球化力量和国际竞争的背景下”(Atkinson 2019)。Wagner和Growe直截了当地指出,“中小城市,既不被认为是集聚区,也不被认为是大都市区,也不位于偏远的农村地区,在研究中基本上被忽视了”(2021,106)。我们认为,这种相对的忽视在很大程度上源于学者们的一种看法,即尽管可能有很多小城市,但它们并不特别有趣;也就是说,小城市没有提出学者关心的关于城市化和变化的严肃问题;正如Ocejo等人建议的那样
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
期刊介绍: Geografiska Annaler, Series B, is a prestigious international journal publishing articles covering all theoretical and empirical aspects of human and economic geography. The journal has no specific regional profile but some attention is paid to research from the Nordic countries, as well as from countries around the Baltic Sea. Geografiska Annaler, Series B is supported by the Swedish Council for Research in Humanities and Social Sciences.
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