Comparer des méthodes
Examinez les méthodes sélectionnées côte à côte ; les lignes qui diffèrent sont mises en évidence.
| Shrinking Cities Analysis× | Gentrification Analysis× | |
|---|---|---|
| Domaine | Urban Studies | Urban Studies |
| Famille | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Année d'origine≠ | 2014 | 1979 |
| Auteur d'origine≠ | Shrinking Cities research network; Haase, Rink, Grossmann, Bernt, Mykhnenko (synthesis) | Ruth Glass (term, 1964); Neil Smith (rent-gap theory) |
| Type≠ | Descriptive pipeline for analysing urban population and economic decline, vacancy, and right-sizing | Pipeline for detecting and measuring neighbourhood socioeconomic upgrading and displacement |
| Source fondatrice≠ | Haase, A., Rink, D., Grossmann, K., Bernt, M., & Mykhnenko, V. (2014). Conceptualizing urban shrinkage. Environment and Planning A, 46(7), 1519–1534. DOI ↗ | Smith, N. (1979). Toward a theory of gentrification: A back to the city movement by capital, not people. Journal of the American Planning Association, 45(4), 538–548. DOI ↗ |
| Alias | Urban Shrinkage Analysis, Urban Decline Analysis, Right-Sizing Analysis, Depopulation Analysis | Gentrification Measurement, Neighbourhood Upgrading Analysis, Rent Gap Analysis, Displacement Risk Analysis |
| Apparentées | 4 | 4 |
| Résumé≠ | Shrinking cities analysis is the study of cities and neighbourhoods that are losing population and economic activity, tracing the demographic decline, job loss, housing vacancy, and infrastructural over-capacity that follow, and the 'right-sizing' planning responses they provoke. It treats shrinkage not as the temporary failure of a growth path but as a distinct, often persistent urban trajectory requiring its own descriptive tools. The conceptual synthesis by Haase and colleagues in 2014 frames urban shrinkage as a multidimensional process linking population loss, economic restructuring, and changes in the built environment. | Gentrification analysis is the set of methods used to detect, measure, and map the process by which a previously disinvested, lower-income neighbourhood is upgraded through an influx of capital and higher-status residents, often displacing the existing population. It typically combines repeated small-area census data on income, education, tenure, and rents with housing-market indicators to compute change indices that flag where socioeconomic status is rising fastest. Grounded in Neil Smith's 1979 rent-gap theory, the analysis frames gentrification as the reinvestment of capital in places where the gap between actual and potential land rent has grown large enough to be profitable. |
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