Vidéki megújulás, vagy folytatódó elnéptelenedés?: A visegrádi országok vidéki vándormozgalmi folyamatai a centrum-periféria viszonyok függvényében

dc.author.affiliationATOhu
dc.author.mtmtid10038706
dc.contributor.authorLennert, József
dc.coverage.mtmtmtmthu
dc.date.accessioned2015-06-29T10:49:11Z
dc.date.available2015-06-29T10:49:11Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.description.abstractThe nineteen-seventies marked a turnaround in the rural migration patterns and the beginning of counterurbanisation in the United States and many Western European countries. The destination area of the counterurban migrants is outside of the metropolitan areas and functional urban areas. Although the changing rural migration patterns can be partially explained with the new spatial division of labour, a large part of the movements are motivated by lifestyle strategies, pursuing natural amenities. In the countries of the Visegrád Group, because of their lagging development and the interventions of the socialist regimes, preceding stages of the urbanisation process dominated till the political and economic transition. After the transition, not counterurbanisation, but suburbanisation emerged as the most noticeable rural migration process. Moreover, remote rural areas not only became a possible destination for migrants seeking natural amenities but also for low-class people losing their livelihood in the urban areas after the economic transition. The aim of my research is to examine the extent of migration turnaround in the rural areas of the Visegrád countries, with a focus on the differences between central and peripheral areas. Firstly I selected the local administrative units (Lau-2) of the Visegrád Group which can be considered rural. The overall migration balance of the distinguished rural units turned to positive after the economic transition. I used the temporal distance of large and middle-sized cities to describe the central or peripheral location of the rural municipalities. I analysed the correlation between migration balance and temporal distance of large and middle-sized cities in five categories: capital cities, cities with more than 400000 inhabitants (only in Poland), cities with more than 100000 inhabitants, cities with more than 50000 inhabitants and cites with more than 30000 inhabitants. The researches showed that distance from the urban centres still pay a key role in the ability of the rural settlements to attract and sustain population. In Hungary and Slovakia, the temporal distance of the capital showed the strongest correlation with the migration balance. In Poland the temporal distance of cities with more than 100000 inbabitants, while in the Czech Republic, the temporal distance from cities with more than 50000 inhabitants proved to be the most significant.hu
dc.description.accessCsak helyi hálózaton érhető elhu
dc.format.extentfirstpage72hu
dc.format.extentlastpage86hu
dc.format.extentvolume4hu
dc.identifier.accessRKI-LOCAL
dc.identifier.citationTelepülésföldrajzi Tanulmányok (ISSN: 2063-4315) 4: (1) pp. 72-86. (2015)hu
dc.identifier.issn2063-4315hu
dc.identifier.mtmt-recordid2879686
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11155/937
dc.languagemagyarhu
dc.relation.ispartofjournalTelepülésföldrajzi Tanulmányokhu
dc.relation.ispartofjournalissue1hu
dc.rights© Településtudományi Közlemények - Minden jog fenntartva.hu
dc.subjectvisegrádi országokhu
dc.subjectmigrációhu
dc.subjectvándorláshu
dc.subjectcentrum-perifériahu
dc.titleVidéki megújulás, vagy folytatódó elnéptelenedés?: A visegrádi országok vidéki vándormozgalmi folyamatai a centrum-periféria viszonyok függvényébenhu
dc.typejournalArticleen
dc.type.descriptionfolyóiratcikkhu
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