2014
DOI: 10.1080/09654313.2013.878691
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Global Metropolitan-Regional Scale in Evolution: Metropolitan Intermediary Cities and Metropolitan Cities

Abstract: The case of Madrid is used as empirical focus to propose a new classification of the metropolitan region urban medium-sized or secondary city system. Based on a methodology that integrates the morphological (size, location and socioeconomic history) and the functional dimensions (centrality index, advanced producer services (APS) concentration and commuting), the article compares new employment centres-cities with metropolitan origin-and historical cities-previously free standing cities, progressively integrat… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 55 publications
(55 reference statements)
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“…While previous scholars have already analysed mobility in central Spain, most of them have focused on the Madrid Administrative Region [14,74]. Recently, studies have analysed the CLM region, some in an isolated manner [37] and others combined with the Madrid region [49].…”
Section: Study Area: Central Spain As a Case Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While previous scholars have already analysed mobility in central Spain, most of them have focused on the Madrid Administrative Region [14,74]. Recently, studies have analysed the CLM region, some in an isolated manner [37] and others combined with the Madrid region [49].…”
Section: Study Area: Central Spain As a Case Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In parallel, processes of population/economic decentralization have taken place, leading to the emergence of new metropolitan sub-centres and the integration of historic cities and to the expansion of the metropolitan region beyond the Madrid Administrative Region [75]. As a result, functional interrelations have developed in the neighbouring provinces of two different 'rural metro-adjacent regions' [49]: CLM and Castilla y León.…”
Section: Madrid Administrative Regionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…One of the outcomes of this neglect is an adherence by policymakers to generic normative concepts applied to urban regions as a 'remedy for all kinds of urban and regional problems ' (121). This disregards that experiences of development have historical and local explanations and may be exemplary only for specific types of urban region, which changed over time in different ways, often shifting trajectories and blending different forms of growth (Solis, Mohino, and Urena 2015).…”
Section: The Different Routes Towards Urban Regionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, except for strictly PUR cases, noncentrifugal forms of urbanisation have been mostly attributed to the second half of the twentieth century, seen as regime changes following earlier stages of centrifugal growth (van den Berg, Drewett, and Klaasen 1982;Schmid 2006). Champion's triple classification has been used in research but often to argue that cities have progressed in time along centrifugal, incorporation and fusion modes (Solis, Mohino, and Urena 2015). But some urban regions have experienced early forms of multi-centric and non-hierarchical growth, gradually populating the territory with semi-autonomous urban fragments, without going through earlier core-periphery expansion stages (Portas, Domingues, and Cabral 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%