Remote and connected

IF 0.7 Q2 AREA STUDIES
Aurore Flipo, Patricia Lejoux, N. Ovtracht
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Originally associated to big cities' centres, coworking spaces and «third-places» have been blooming in rural regions and small towns over the past five years. The development of those places has been critically supported by local and national authorities, with a growing interest from rural localities. Indeed, those places are supposed to provide answers to numerous contemporary territorial challenges, and to tackle several dimensions or rural vulnerability. They are supposed to enhance sustainability by reducing the need to commute and car-dependence, by bringing both workplaces and services closer from home. They are also mobilised to tackle the issue of the digital gap between centres and peripheries, providing digital infrastructures and hardware. Finally, they are supposed to reduce territorial inequalities by strenghtening rural entrepreneurship, safeguarding local jobs, facilitating professional retraining and attract new residents by providing an easier access to telework. Conducted between 2018 and 2020 in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, our study provides some elements to evaluate the effects of those places on territorial vulnerability and marginality. Based on the study of 17 coworking spaces situated in rural areas, their funders’ trajectories and their users’ profiles, we discuss the motives and the expected returns of those places, and their actual potentialities and limits. We first present the definitions of coworking spaces and third-places, the origin of their recent spread in the rural areas and the main features of their geographical locations. Then, we present the rationales behind the creation and attendance to those places, by analysing funders and users’ trajectories and motives. We then present the potentialities and limits of third-places on territorial vulnerability. In the discussion, we interrogate the notion of marginality at the light of those places, that can be defined essentially as spatial and social networks. Indeed, our study enlights the diversity of lifestyles in the rural areas. Coworkers display particular spatial anchorages, with local resources being valued, though combined with forms of plural and multilocalized belongings. Their relationship with the margin is chosen, controlled and reversible, sometimes even yearned for. Their connectedness is not so much defined by where they live rather than by who they know, embodying the predominantly social dimension of marginality.
远程连接
联合办公空间和“第三空间”最初与大城市的中心联系在一起,在过去的五年里,它们在农村地区和小城镇蓬勃发展。这些地方的发展得到了地方和国家当局的大力支持,农村地区也越来越感兴趣。事实上,这些地方应该为许多当代领土挑战提供答案,并解决农村脆弱性的几个方面。通过减少通勤和对汽车的依赖,通过将工作场所和服务场所都带到离家更近的地方,它们本应增强可持续性。它们还被动员起来解决中心和外围地区之间的数字差距问题,提供数字基础设施和硬件。最后,他们应该通过加强农村创业,保障当地就业,促进专业再培训和通过提供更容易的远程办公来吸引新居民来减少地域不平等。在2018年至2020年期间,我们在Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes地区进行了研究,提供了一些元素来评估这些地方对领土脆弱性和边缘性的影响。本文通过对17个农村共享办公空间的研究,探讨了这些地方的发展动机和预期回报,以及它们的实际潜力和局限性。我们首先介绍了共享办公空间和第三空间的定义,它们最近在农村地区传播的起源以及它们的地理位置的主要特征。然后,我们通过分析资助者和用户的轨迹和动机,提出了这些地方的创建和出席背后的理由。然后,我们提出了第三名在领土脆弱性方面的潜力和限制。在讨论中,我们在这些地方的光照下询问边际性的概念,这些地方本质上可以定义为空间和社会网络。的确,我们的研究揭示了农村地区生活方式的多样性。同事们表现出特定的空间锚定,当地的资源被重视,尽管与多元和多局部的财产形式相结合。他们与边际的关系是可选择的、可控制的、可逆转的,有时甚至是渴望的。他们的联系与其说是由他们居住的地方决定的,不如说是由他们认识的人决定的,这体现了边缘化的主要社会层面。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Baltic Region
Baltic Region AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
37.50%
发文量
11
审稿时长
24 weeks
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