Mots-clés
Agriculture ; Aménagement régional ; Centre-périphérie ; Espace rural ; Espace urbain ; Géographie historique ; Industrie ; Pays-Bas ; Planification régionale ; Siècle 20Agriculture ; Core-periphery ; Historical geography ; Industry ; Netherlands (The) ; Regional planning ; Regional planning authority ; Rural area ; Twentieth Century ; Urban area ; Urban-rural dichotomy ; northern Netherlands ; peri-urban landscape ; planning history ; regional economic policyAgricultura ; Centro-periferia ; Espacio rural ; Espacio urbano ; Geografía histórica ; Industria ; Ordenamiento regional ; Países Bajos ; Planificación regional ; Siglo 20The Urban West and the Rural Rest: Framing in Dutch Regional Planning in the 1950s
Auteur(s) et Affiliation(s)
Molema, Marijn
Department of Landscape Architecture, Wageningen University
Description :
This paper draws on the case of Dutch regional planning in the 1950s to investigate how ‘urban space’ and ‘rural space’ have traditionally been perceived as opposing concepts. During this decade, politicians, planners and policy-makers constructed an image of an overdeveloped, urban, industrial centre on the one hand, and an underdeveloped, rural, agricultural periphery on the other. Rooted in a debate about the ‘harmonious’ development of the Netherlands, this image made a substantial contribution to the schematic understanding of urban and rural space. Examining this frame as an historical construct helps to reveal the anachronistic character of many of the urban-rural differentiations that are made today.
Type de document :
Article de périodique
Source :
Landscape research (Online), issn : 1469-9710, 2012, vol. 37, n°. 4, p. 437-450, nombre de pages : 14
Date :
2012
Identifiants :
doi : http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01426397.2012.687444
Editeur :
Pays édition : Royaume-Uni, Abingdon, Taylor and Francis
Langue :
Anglais
Anglais
Droits :
Tous droits réservés © Prodig - Bibliographie Géographique Internationale (BGI)
Tous droits réservés © Prodig - Bibliographie Géographique Internationale (BGI)