2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.cities.2013.01.007
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Retail planning and urban resilience – An introduction to the special issue

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Cited by 81 publications
(50 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…Erkip (2005) shows that these spaces do exclude some people in Turkey, not only on the basis of income but also on the basis of social class. Other scholars emphasize the importance of accessible retail facilities by all segments of society and note that an increasing number of shopping centres discriminate against the mobility impaired, the elderly and low-income households because the malls are only accessible by car (Barata-Salgueira & Erkip, 2014;Guy, 1998Guy, , 2007. Guy (2007) also points out that such exclusion can be controlled by enhancing local shopping and public transportation policies and recommends preserving local shopping in traditional urban districts, improving poor-quality retail facilities and supporting surviving businesses through urban policies.…”
Section: Impacts On the Use Of Public Spacesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Erkip (2005) shows that these spaces do exclude some people in Turkey, not only on the basis of income but also on the basis of social class. Other scholars emphasize the importance of accessible retail facilities by all segments of society and note that an increasing number of shopping centres discriminate against the mobility impaired, the elderly and low-income households because the malls are only accessible by car (Barata-Salgueira & Erkip, 2014;Guy, 1998Guy, , 2007. Guy (2007) also points out that such exclusion can be controlled by enhancing local shopping and public transportation policies and recommends preserving local shopping in traditional urban districts, improving poor-quality retail facilities and supporting surviving businesses through urban policies.…”
Section: Impacts On the Use Of Public Spacesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…''In this context, the resilience of an urban retail system is defined as the ability of different types of retailing to adapt to changes, crises or shocks that challenge the system's equilibrium without failing to perform their functions in a sustainable way'' (Replacis, 2011). In a sense, resilience is the new form of sustainability, and is thus a current topic of discussion (see, for example Stumpp, 2013;Davoudi, 2012 andBarata-Salgueira and on its meaning and applicability to social sciences and planning). Shaw (2012) calls it a paradigm shift with new challenges, as the focus seems to be on individuals rather than institutions.…”
Section: The Resilience Of Urban Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…At the earlier study of resilience, Holling (1973) described resilience as the ability of the socio-ecological system to accommodate sudden shocks and disturbances without experiencing changes to the system. The resilience of places refers to the ability to survive (Barata-Salgueiro & Erkip, 2014), adapt, and resistance from economic, environment, and social shocks and disasters and fast recovery to its original position after receiving a disruption (Ding & Hu, 2016;Scott, 2013;Skerratt, 2013;Wilson, 2012). Rural resilience itself is the resistance of rural to withstand of changes on its economic, environment and social condition.…”
Section: Rural Resilience Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…firstly, the challenges for urban governance stemming from the success of malls have been neglected by planning research -exceptions are a special issue of Cities devoted to retail planning and urban resilience (Barata-salgueiro & erkip, 2014), and filion and Hammond's (2008) analysis of downtown malls in mid-sized cities. On the contrary, understanding the 'effects of retail-induced spatial reorganization ' (rabbiosi, 2011: 82) is a useful instrument for developing insights into the relation between post-metropolitan spatialities and multi-scalar/multi-level challenges for urban governance in fragmented institutional cultures.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%