Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2155173862> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 73 of
73
with 100 items per page.
- W2155173862 endingPage "205" @default.
- W2155173862 startingPage "181" @default.
- W2155173862 abstract "Germany is currently on the way to becoming a society with an ageing and declining population. This is due to the fact that the country has had extremely low fertility for more than 30 years. With an ageing population, and their preference for ageing in place, the strong impact of internal migration on the spatial differentiation of population structures is declining, and international migration gains in the urban cores will become more influential in the future. Thus, city core regions may gain in demographic terms from young migrants, while suburban areas may no longer be able to compensate for their rapid ageing by a continuous stream of resettling families, and rural areas may face increasing migration losses besides their rapid ageing. The article provides an update on the current demographic change in Germany and the resulting increase in spatial disparities of population structures based on the latest spatial forecast of the Federal Institute for Research on Building, Urban Affairs and Spatial Development. The introduction includes extended coverage of recent German research literature on the topic. The main section describes the spatial ageing patterns and analyses the presented reversal in the aging process of urban cores, suburban and rural counties as a result of ageing. The population dynamics of two regions are investigated in greater detail as an example of the regions which are most prone to the effects of ageing in place: suburban counties in the West and rural counties in the East of the country. Finally, the findings are placed into the context of the recent discussion on the question of whether Germany is on the brink of a revival of the city or a reurbanisation process. The common understanding that urban cores are demographically older than their surrounding regions has to be reconsidered in the light of the insight on ageing-in-place effects of ageing populations and of the reversal of ageing patterns which are shown in this paper. Statistical proof of a new steady trend of reurbanisation measured in terms of population growth by migration gains is not (yet) possible. Even if populations in city cores have grown slightly in recent years as a result of migration, suburbanisation is still the dominant trend. However, if positive internal migration balances of city cores and reduced suburbanisation prevail, the reversal process of ageing will gain additional momentum." @default.
- W2155173862 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2155173862 creator A5014987071 @default.
- W2155173862 creator A5031452614 @default.
- W2155173862 creator A5042553445 @default.
- W2155173862 date "2008-06-01" @default.
- W2155173862 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W2155173862 title "Spatial impacts of demographic change in Germany" @default.
- W2155173862 cites W1973215625 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W2006216194 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W2014831267 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W2047586977 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W2052614841 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W2102156061 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W2105775119 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W225147235 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W2476700634 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W2484970993 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W2517579837 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W2525088058 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W254618474 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W484907056 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W495594645 @default.
- W2155173862 cites W94334546 @default.
- W2155173862 doi "https://doi.org/10.1007/s12523-009-0010-9" @default.
- W2155173862 hasPublicationYear "2008" @default.
- W2155173862 type Work @default.
- W2155173862 sameAs 2155173862 @default.
- W2155173862 citedByCount "33" @default.
- W2155173862 countsByYear W21551738622012 @default.
- W2155173862 countsByYear W21551738622013 @default.
- W2155173862 countsByYear W21551738622015 @default.
- W2155173862 countsByYear W21551738622016 @default.
- W2155173862 countsByYear W21551738622017 @default.
- W2155173862 countsByYear W21551738622018 @default.
- W2155173862 countsByYear W21551738622019 @default.
- W2155173862 countsByYear W21551738622020 @default.
- W2155173862 countsByYear W21551738622023 @default.
- W2155173862 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2155173862 hasAuthorship W2155173862A5014987071 @default.
- W2155173862 hasAuthorship W2155173862A5031452614 @default.
- W2155173862 hasAuthorship W2155173862A5042553445 @default.
- W2155173862 hasConcept C205649164 @default.
- W2155173862 hasConcept C2908647359 @default.
- W2155173862 hasConcept C2986043164 @default.
- W2155173862 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W2155173862 hasConcept C99454951 @default.
- W2155173862 hasConceptScore W2155173862C205649164 @default.
- W2155173862 hasConceptScore W2155173862C2908647359 @default.
- W2155173862 hasConceptScore W2155173862C2986043164 @default.
- W2155173862 hasConceptScore W2155173862C71924100 @default.
- W2155173862 hasConceptScore W2155173862C99454951 @default.
- W2155173862 hasIssue "2" @default.
- W2155173862 hasLocation W21551738621 @default.
- W2155173862 hasOpenAccess W2155173862 @default.
- W2155173862 hasPrimaryLocation W21551738621 @default.
- W2155173862 hasRelatedWork W190113963 @default.
- W2155173862 hasRelatedWork W1991627163 @default.
- W2155173862 hasRelatedWork W2514809985 @default.
- W2155173862 hasRelatedWork W2758254974 @default.
- W2155173862 hasRelatedWork W3033337949 @default.
- W2155173862 hasRelatedWork W3033361737 @default.
- W2155173862 hasRelatedWork W4316088399 @default.
- W2155173862 hasRelatedWork W1661079090 @default.
- W2155173862 hasRelatedWork W2142384350 @default.
- W2155173862 hasRelatedWork W2735953895 @default.
- W2155173862 hasVolume "33" @default.
- W2155173862 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2155173862 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2155173862 magId "2155173862" @default.
- W2155173862 workType "article" @default.