2002
DOI: 10.1111/1467-9663.00190
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Bounded spaces in the mobile world: Deconstructing ‘regional identity’

Abstract: Regional identity has become an important category in the 'Europe of regions', and one that is often taken as self-evident in the relations between a group of people and a bounded region. The movement of people, capital and information across spatial boundaries that takes place in the contemporary world challenges the supposed harmonious link between regions and people on all spatial scales. This paper analyses the meanings of region and identity, and the links between them. Regions are understood as historica… Show more

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Cited by 263 publications
(223 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
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“…Term diversity also prevails on the regional level. Some of these diverse expressions are regional identity and regional consciousness (Paasi, 2002), sense of regional belonging (Fritz-Vietta, La Vega-Leinert and Stoll-Kleemann, 2015) or subjective and objective territorial identity (Oliveira, Roca and Leitão, 2010). Related concepts are urban-related identities (Lalli, 1992) or the German notion of 'Heimat' (Ratter and Gee, 2012).…”
Section: Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Term diversity also prevails on the regional level. Some of these diverse expressions are regional identity and regional consciousness (Paasi, 2002), sense of regional belonging (Fritz-Vietta, La Vega-Leinert and Stoll-Kleemann, 2015) or subjective and objective territorial identity (Oliveira, Roca and Leitão, 2010). Related concepts are urban-related identities (Lalli, 1992) or the German notion of 'Heimat' (Ratter and Gee, 2012).…”
Section: Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, such cognitions do not automatically result in individual identification with a region. Collective regional identities can only generate action, when people 'believe in them' (Paasi, 2002) and subjectively relate to them (Lalli, 1992). On the individual level, shared place-related cognitions are internalized and combined with other beliefs and meanings, e.g.…”
Section: Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Painter (2010Painter ( : 1094 reflects regarding the related concept of territory, regions (and other spatial entities) can be seen as "porous, historical, mutable, uneven and perishable... a laborious work in progress, prone to failure and permeated by tension and contradiction... never complete, always becoming". Thus conceptualized, processes towards regionalization go on all the time at all sorts of geographical scale levels (see Painter, 2008;Paasi, 2002a;Paasi, 2002b) making it a distinctly trans-scalar concept 1 that more than anything highlights the manipulation of scale (Law, 1999) and the production of new scale units.…”
Section: Ant Regionalization Theory and The Formation Processes Of Smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such a process of in-migration into the Welsh 'heartland' is the main raison d'être for Cymuned as an organization (see below) and echoes the more general claims that have been made concerning the impact of migration and processes of globalization on territories and regions (see ANDERSON and O'DOWD, 1999;PAASI, 2002). Secondly, and perhaps more contentiously, we would argue that it also reflects an implicit admission that the construction of a 'Fro Gymraeg' as a It is significant that Cymuned have been aware of the conflict between the actuality of a highly-variegated linguistic space within the 'Fro Gymraeg' and the need to portray it as a united linguistic territory.…”
Section: Defining the Welsh Heartlandmentioning
confidence: 80%