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Destiny of Urban Brownfields: Spatial Patterns and Perceived Consequences of Post-Socialistic Deindustrialization
- 1.0429432 - ÚGN 2015 RIV TR eng J - Journal Article
Kunc, J. - Martinát, Stanislav - Tonev, P. - Frantál, Bohumil
Destiny of Urban Brownfields: Spatial Patterns and Perceived Consequences of Post-Socialistic Deindustrialization.
Transylvanian Review of Administrative Sciences. 41E, February (2014), s. 109-128. ISSN 1842-2845. E-ISSN 2247-8310
R&D Projects: GA MŠMT EE2.3.20.0025
Institutional support: RVO:68145535
Keywords : brownfields * perception * residents * city of Brno * city of Ostrava
Subject RIV: DE - Earth Magnetism, Geodesy, Geography
Impact factor: 0.333, year: 2014
http://rtsa.ro/en/files/RTSA%2041%20E%20-7KUNC,%20MARTINAT,%20TONEV,%20FRANTAL.pdf
Compared to Western European or North American countries with developed market economies, the formation and acceptance of brownfields in post-socialist countries was delayed by approximately 30 years. For the Central European and partly Eastern European countries, the fall of the Iron Curtain and the transition after 1989 from a planned and state-controlled economy towards a market economy was unique, for its time consistency. Yet, it was also specific for the distinct statuses of main sectors of national economy of individual countries, which got hugely manifested during the formation of spatial and functional connections concerning the problems of brownfields of all types (post-industrial, post-agricultural, post-military etc.). In the Czech Republic, there is a long history of industry; from the middle of the 19th century (the boom of the Industrial Revolution), it was regarded the most industrially developed country of Central and Eastern Europe. The massive deindustrialization of the 1990s caused increased concentrations of brownfield localities, with the local people and public administration becoming more familiar with them.
Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0234543
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