2021
DOI: 10.4000/belgeo.46679
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The Romanian white-collar immigrants in Brussels: a transnational community under construction

Abstract: Belgeo est mis à disposition selon les termes de la licence Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International.

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Evoking the deplorable image of the coal fields located in East Germany after the sudden closure of the lignite mines at the beginning of the 90s, Deshaies listed the quasi-general shortcomings of a post-mining region during the transition to another economic model: (a) degraded environment and landscapes, (b) high unemployment rates, (c) inadequate training of local people, (d) loss of identity among local communities, and (d) demographic decline. In the specific case of Romania, the inability to convert the post-industrial territories has already generated massive emigration, millions of Romanians originating from deindustrialised areas finding a better standard of living in other EU member states [26]. As for those remaining in the increasingly depopulated regions, they are currently trying to take advantage of the opportunities offered by the sustainability policies imposed at the European level, tourism being considered by many local stakeholders as a viable post-mining development track [27].…”
Section: Challenges In Transforming Post-mining Regions Into Tourist ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Evoking the deplorable image of the coal fields located in East Germany after the sudden closure of the lignite mines at the beginning of the 90s, Deshaies listed the quasi-general shortcomings of a post-mining region during the transition to another economic model: (a) degraded environment and landscapes, (b) high unemployment rates, (c) inadequate training of local people, (d) loss of identity among local communities, and (d) demographic decline. In the specific case of Romania, the inability to convert the post-industrial territories has already generated massive emigration, millions of Romanians originating from deindustrialised areas finding a better standard of living in other EU member states [26]. As for those remaining in the increasingly depopulated regions, they are currently trying to take advantage of the opportunities offered by the sustainability policies imposed at the European level, tourism being considered by many local stakeholders as a viable post-mining development track [27].…”
Section: Challenges In Transforming Post-mining Regions Into Tourist ...mentioning
confidence: 99%