2019
DOI: 10.1111/gean.12195
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Defining Functional Polycentricity From a Geographical Perspective

Abstract: Despite the prevalence of polycentricity as a normative strategy in planning documents, a lengthy and inconclusive debate regarding its definition in academic research persists. The aim of this article is to eliminate the conceptual confusion surrounding functional polycentricity from a geographical perspective. By classifying different approaches to polycentricity, we outline the properties that characterize all forms of functional polycentricity. Accordingly, we redefine functional polycentricity and propose… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…It seems to go beyond the four stages of the SCM towards a condition of continuous urbanization, varying only in morphology and intensity, and dissolving contrasts between cores, rings and places within and outside conventional FURs. This evolution is closer to the functional 'Acentric II' final stage in the model by Shu et al (2019), limited only by faster growth in a handful of attractive centres, for which further research could be carried out to see which factors make them stand out (e.g., capital city effects). But the overall principle was already part of Friedmann's (1978) 'urban field' concept, whose key ideas have been recently revitalized for the European context by the claim about the 'end of urbanization' by Andersen et al (2011) and the work on metropolization processes by Cardoso and Meijers (2020).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 75%
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“…It seems to go beyond the four stages of the SCM towards a condition of continuous urbanization, varying only in morphology and intensity, and dissolving contrasts between cores, rings and places within and outside conventional FURs. This evolution is closer to the functional 'Acentric II' final stage in the model by Shu et al (2019), limited only by faster growth in a handful of attractive centres, for which further research could be carried out to see which factors make them stand out (e.g., capital city effects). But the overall principle was already part of Friedmann's (1978) 'urban field' concept, whose key ideas have been recently revitalized for the European context by the claim about the 'end of urbanization' by Andersen et al (2011) and the work on metropolization processes by Cardoso and Meijers (2020).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Lately, and which was not seen as inevitable some time ago (Nyström, 1992), a stage IV of re-urbanization, featuring a regrowing core city, took shape, although this process is selective, dependent on active policy incentives, and sometimes reserved for the larger core cities. A deviating empirical experience in most European urban regions was that, unlike the model suggests, suburban areas actually grew during all stages, leading functional and demographic densification up to the point where the very notion of 'suburban' became contested (Andersen et al, 2011;Tzaninis & Boterman, 2018), in line with Shu et al, 2019. In addition, and again pointing to the role of policy rather than assuming a 'natural', structural principle governing the SCM, we can identify plenty of shrinking core cities in Europe (Wolff & Wiechmann, 2018).…”
Section: Polycentricity and Demographymentioning
confidence: 87%
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