Description |
1 online resource (314 p.) |
Contents |
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Foreword. Territorial Capital and Spatial Inequalities -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Metropolization and Territorial Inequalities -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. T200 years of territorial inequalities -- 1.2.1. The development of the French metropolitan area -- 1.2.2. Processes of population concentration and deconcentration -- 1.2.3. The spatiotemporal model and territorial inequalities -- 1.3. Metropolization: 30 years of changing territorial inequalities -- 1.3.1. Methodology and databases |
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1.3.2. The majority of French household income is concentrated in suburban rings -- 1.3.3. Higher incomes in suburban areas than in the city centers -- 1.3.4. Fewer territorial disparities in areas polarized by small and medium-sized cities -- 1.3.5. Typology of territorial inequalities -- 1.3.6. Rapid growth in per capita incomes in periurban rings -- 1.3.7. Geographic inequalities in terms of income per capita -- 1.4. Wealth circulation and the reshaping of territorial inequalities -- 1.4.1. The economic base theory: an operational conceptual framework for the analysis of income flows |
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1.4.2. Productive residential systems -- 1.4.3. PRSs and territorial development -- 1.5. Conclusion -- 1.6. Appendices -- 1.7. References -- Chapter 2. Inequalities in Territorial Development: Enigmas and Threats -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. The evolution of development inequalities -- 2.2.1. How should local or regional development be defined? -- 2.2.2. The widening of productive inequalities -- 2.2.3. Reducing inequalities in territorial income -- 2.2.4. Territorial inequalities do not equate to social inequalities -- 2.2.5. Policies for the "neighborhoods" or for the people? |
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2.2.6. Inequality and poverty -- 2.2.7. A reduction in territorial inequalities in terms of income -- 2.3. Public mechanisms for territorial cohesion -- 2.3.1. Redistribution mechanisms for public funds -- 2.3.2. Interterritorial redistribution linked to social welfare budgets -- 2.3.3. The redistributive effects of public budgets between regions -- 2.3.4. Fragmented European cohesion -- 2.3.5. Unequal treatment of equals -- 2.3.6. The "Catalonia" effect -- 2.4. The risk of rejecting intranational solidarities -- 2.4.1. The revolt of the rich regions -- 2.4.2. Questioning the cohesion model |
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2.4.3. Wealthy regions independent of poor regions -- 2.5. References -- Chapter 3. Which Geographical Figures Should Be Mobilized Against Particular Territorial Inequalities? -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. The Saint-Malo-Geneva line -- 3.2.1. An obscure and enlightened France -- 3.2.2. From map to policy -- 3.2.3. A paradoxical ingratitude? -- 3.3. The countryside and the city -- 3.3.1. The long persistence of a rural densely populated world -- 3.3.2. The marriage of the Republic and the countryside -- 3.3.3. Solidarity through networks -- 3.3.4. Cycles of inequality |
Notes |
Description based upon print version of record |
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3.4. The Paris-countryside divide |
Subject |
Political geography.
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Political planning.
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Equality -- Political aspects
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Regional economic disparities.
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Tallec, Josselin
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ISBN |
1394257384 |
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9781394257386 |
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