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Urban Shrinkage and Socio-Economic Segregation in Medium-Sized Cities: The Case of Schwerin (Germany) Cover

Urban Shrinkage and Socio-Economic Segregation in Medium-Sized Cities: The Case of Schwerin (Germany)

Open Access
|Dec 2021

Abstract

Although past studies have found that processes of urban shrinkage may act as a catalyst for socio-economic segregation, these relationships remain underexplored outside the context of large cities and capitals. Moreover, cities at lower-tiers of the urban hierarchy in post-socialist Europe have been doubly excluded from the critical discourse on the socio-spatial effects of shrinkage. Hence, this article examines how shrinkage affects socio-economic segregation in the medium-sized post-socialist city of Schwerin, employing segregation indices to assess levels of spatial unevenness and location quotients to map intra-urban patterns of vulnerable population groups over time. Results indicate processes of shrinkage may exacerbate socio-economic segregation in medium-sized cities and that the spatial heterogeneity of shrinkage intersects with uneven distributions of affluence and poverty. However, suggesting that legacies of state socialism shape contemporary socio-spatial change, segregation in Schwerin is strongly conditioned by its socialist-era housing estates, which are generally characterised by the highest rates of population decline, vacancy, and vulnerable groups.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/quageo-2021-0036 | Journal eISSN: 2081-6383 | Journal ISSN: 2082-2103
Language: English
Page range: 29 - 46
Submitted on: Jun 7, 2021
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Published on: Dec 16, 2021
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year
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© 2021 David Huntington, published by Adam Mickiewicz University
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.