Peri-Urban Futures: Scenarios and Models for Land Use Change in Europe 2012
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-30529-0_4
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Tools for Modelling and Assessing Peri-Urban Land Use Futures

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…This is highlighted in Trnava by 25 amendments made to approved urban plan since 2010-partly at the expense of open spaces and urban green areas [84]. Similar problems in planning processes are also encountered in other post-communist countries, where public institutions have weak actual power; planning has lower importance than in many Western European countries and urban development is often driven by developer investment decisions [87].…”
Section: Planning and Management Responsesmentioning
confidence: 92%
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“…This is highlighted in Trnava by 25 amendments made to approved urban plan since 2010-partly at the expense of open spaces and urban green areas [84]. Similar problems in planning processes are also encountered in other post-communist countries, where public institutions have weak actual power; planning has lower importance than in many Western European countries and urban development is often driven by developer investment decisions [87].…”
Section: Planning and Management Responsesmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…In the early 1990s, the urban structure of post-socialist cities shows different composition to Western Europe, with the most prominent feature being mass housing estates on a scale unknown in Western European cities [87]. The following factors were significant in shaping socialist cities: (1) poor development of services causing unification of the distribution of inhabitants; (2) collectivisation of land with social, but not economic land value; (3) the morphological structure of new cities and new quarters in old cities; and (4) changes to land-use and organization of the social life of the city inhabitants by large industrial plants [88].…”
Section: Broader Context Of Socio-economic Development Policy and Rementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…On the other hand, as a contrast, we find the remains of old abandoned buildings of former cooperatives, state property, industrial enterprises, but also abandoned residential and farm buildings. There were several landscape ecological issues associated with the development of industrialisation and urbanisation, which were also identified in other countries and were described by several authors [17,18,20,22,24,59,[63][64][65][66][67][68]. The most important environmental problems associated with the transformation process in Slovakia are the following:…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%