Der post-sozialistische Transformationsprozeß im großstädtischen Einzelhandel Ostmittel- und Osteuropas: der Versuch einer Typenbildung zum jüngsten Wandel der Innenstadtstrukturen sowie einer modellhaften Darstellung der sie beeinflussenden Determinanten

Autor: Standl, Harald
Rok vydání: 1998
Předmět:
Städtebau
Raumplanung
Landschaftsgestaltung

Soziologie
Anthropologie

Wirtschaft
Landscaping and area planning
Sociology & anthropology
Economics
Raumplanung und Regionalforschung
Siedlungssoziologie
Stadtsoziologie

Wirtschaftssektoren
Volkswirtschaftstheorie
Soziologie von Gesamtgesellschaften
Area Development Planning
Regional Research

Sociology of Settlements and Housing
Urban Sociology

Economic Sectors
National Economy
Macrosociology
Analysis of Whole Societies

Osteuropa
Ostmitteleuropa
Transformation
Großstadt
Stadtentwicklung
Stadt
Einzelhandel
Innenstadt
Strukturwandel
Privatisierung
Bruttosozialprodukt
Inflation
Unternehmensgründung
Immobilien
Eigentumsrecht
Standortfaktoren
Eastern Europe
East Central Europe
transformation
large city
urban development
town
retail trade
city center
structural change
privatization
gross national product
inflation
setting up a business
real estate
right of ownership
location factors
20700
Zdroj: Europa Regional, 6.1998, 3, 2-15
Druh dokumentu: Zeitschriftenartikel<br />journal article
ISSN: 0943-7142
Popis: There is still considerable research deficit with regard to the post-socialist retail trade research and the geographic research of major cities in Eastern Central and Eastern Europe. Nonetheless, this article will attempt to state a summary of the most important, determining factors for the current changes in structure and regional function in the core areas of the Eastern Central and Eastern European major cities, and to typify the transformation in the city centre location patterns of retail trade. In th is context, the initial thesis is that new developments of company forms and city centre location patterns in retail trade which are manifest in Eastern Central and Eastern Europe are essentially determined by complex issues of company structures and regional factors. The influential factors of company structure are a) the course and results of transformation in ownership laws in retail trade, effected by both privatisation measures and the establishment of new companies, b) the general economic (endogenous and exogenous) framework which follows the privat isation and/or new establishment of companies and which decide the further development of retail trade and c) the transformation of the real estate and property markets. The three regional determinants, which are responsible for the changes in the location pattern in retail trade and for the transformation of the functional order of the city centre, refer to a) the structure and function of the existing building substance and the possibilities for its use in retail trade, b) competition with other locations of retail trade inside and outside of the city and c) the scope of private use and/or suitability of public space for use by informal retail trade such as kiosks and market stalls. Five different types of new location pattern in city centre retail trade and current regional changes in the cities of Eastern Central and Eastern Europe can be identified: 1.) A regionally disorganised location pattern with barely distinct hierarchical areas of function, for example in Moscow and St. Petersburg. 2.) City centres with clear tendencies of alignment to Central European city structures, such as in Prague or Budapest. 3.) The city centre retail trade st ructures in the new Federal states (former GDR), which are characterised in part by extreme exclusiveness and in part by a banalisation of the range of goods, and which are in very extreme competition with expansive, non-integrated retail trade which has developed outside of the cities. 4.) Relatively autochtonous / independent development within city centre retail trade, with a general formation of hierarchical location patterns, e.g. in Riga (Latvia), Tallinn (Estonia) and many large Polish cities. 5.) Relatively autochtonous development within city centre retail trade, without a general formation of hierarchical location patterns, e.g. in Vilnius (Lithuania).
Databáze: SSOAR – Social Science Open Access Repository