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    Urban specialisation complementarity and spatial development strategies on the island of Ireland.

    Citation

    McCafferty, D. et al.(2013), ' Urban specialisation complementarity and spatial development strategies on the island of Ireland,' Administration, Vol. 60(3), p115-140.
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    McCafferty, D. et al.(2013), ' Urban specialisation complementarity and spatial development strategies on the island of Ireland.(Journal Article)pdf (195.2Kb)
    Date
    2013
    Author
    McCafferty, Des
    Van Egeraat, Chris
    Gleeson, Justin
    Bartley, Brendan
    Peer Reviewed
    Yes
    Metadata
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    McCafferty, D. et al.(2013), ' Urban specialisation complementarity and spatial development strategies on the island of Ireland,' Administration, Vol. 60(3), p115-140.
    Abstract
    Complementarity is one of the key concepts underlying the spatial development strategies introduced on the island of Ireland a decade ago. While neither Northern Ireland’s Regional Development Strategy nor Ireland’s National Spatial Strategy defines the concept explicitly, both documents suggest that it relates to differences in functional roles between places, thereby linking complementarity to the concept of sectoral specialisa - tion. Using data on employment by industrial group from the respective censuses of population, this paper examines the extent to which urban centres in Ireland displayed complementary patterns of specialisation at the regional level at the time the spatial strategies were introduced. The analysis finds little evidence of this, revealing instead a strong tendency towards similar specialisations of neighbouring centres, including those in cross-border settings. The findings point to the need for a more nuanced specification of the policy precept of inter-urban complementarity that is sensitive to both sectoral and geographical scale.
    Keywords
    Urban specialisation
    Spatial planning concepts
    Employment by industrial group
    Ireland
    Language (ISO 639-3)
    eng
    Publisher
    Institute of Public Administration
    Rights
    Used by permission © Institute of Public Administration. The full journal is available at http://www.ipa.ie/index.php?lang=en&p=product&id=242&prodid=266
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10395/1652
    Collections
    • Geography (Peer-reviewed publications)

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