Filipović, Marko

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Small and Medium Towns of Central Serbia - Standpoints and Assumptions on Development Perspectives

Spasić, Nenad; Petrić, Jasna; Filipović, Marko

(Belgrade : Institute of Architecture and Urban & Spatial Planning of Serbia, 2007)

TY  - BOOK
AU  - Spasić, Nenad
AU  - Petrić, Jasna
AU  - Filipović, Marko
PY  - 2007
UR  - https://raumplan.iaus.ac.rs/handle/123456789/407
AB  - The role of lower‐order urban centres in national and regional development constitutes an important subject of debate. In the field of contemporary urban research, small and medium‐sized towns are gaining importance because they build a very important link between big cities and rural areas. Obviously, “small” and “medium” generally refers to the size in terms of population of the towns. However, these are highly subjective qualifications, whose concrete meaning depends on the considered national urban system. As the official statistics in Serbia does not recognise categorisation of urban settlements on small, medium or big, for the purposes of analyses presented in this Monograph we have adopted the conditional categorisation of urban settlements in Central Serbia, which corresponds to categorisation applied in some previous research on small and medium‐sized towns of the post‐World War II Serbia. Attention was paid to development of these settlements in Central Serbia in the two periods: 1948‐1981 and 1981‐2002, since they are marked by different socio‐economic aspects of urbanisation. A body of work in this Monograph treats demographic and economic changes which featured Serbian urban settlements of different categories especially in the period 1948‐1981 (primary urbanisation process) when rural‐to‐urban migrations were mostly expressed, and when small towns in particular were the first “dam” for rural emigrants flows. Although it may seam at first glance that the urban settlements’ distribution in the settlement network of Central Serbia has been satisfactory, the discord between the number of inhabitants in Belgrade as the capital city and other urban settlements points to the issue of sharp division between the centre and the periphery. Small and medium‐sized towns of Central Serbia marked a noticeable population growth in the period of the primary urbanisation, but most of all they had the fastest rate of GNP growth and very high employment rates. However, starting with the economic downturn of the country in the 1990s, when a significant concentration of political and economic power happened in Belgrade, many of these settlements have gone through stagnation. It has to be stressed that as in other countries, a number of smaller and particularly medium‐sized towns of Central Serbia have strong roots in the secondary sector which has particularly suffered because of present global and national economy conditions. In such context the question is why do we take an interest in small and medium‐sized towns now or why at all? Firstly, the renewed interest in these urban settlements in Serbia as in other European countries is that, despite being neglected in the past, they are perceived to play quite different roles along the continuum from centre to periphery. With this in view, it is important to clarify the diversity of roles that small and medium sized towns have in relation to their surroundings. Many of them may seem insignificant at a European or even at a national level, whereas at regional and local level they may be of reasonably large importance, like centres in more remote, rural, mountain and peripheral areas. The role might differ regarding the geographical context of a town (being linked with a big city, or part of a functional cluster of small and medium‐sized towns, or the only urban settlement in a region); the economic performance; the function and size of the town; or other aspects, e.g. accessibility or specialisation in certain sector of activity. The knowledge of the role of small and medium‐sized towns needs to be explored to a much larger degree in order to formulate adequate policy recommendations – both at EU and national level, which on one hand can support existing positive development and on the other hand can assist small and medium‐sized towns in decline in diverting present negative development trends. Small and medium‐sized towns of Central Serbia have a potential to become sustainable, but only if urban networks are developed between these smaller urbanities and also among them and bigger cities. In other words, a key factor for the future existence and development of these towns is cooperation and
new and more efficient types of governance and urban policy. This work aims to offer an incentive for further research on small and medium-sized towns in our country by provision of fundamental theses requiring more thorough investigation in particular contexts.
PB  - Belgrade : Institute of Architecture and Urban & Spatial Planning of Serbia
T1  - Small and Medium Towns of Central Serbia - Standpoints and Assumptions on Development Perspectives
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raumplan_407
ER  - 
@book{
author = "Spasić, Nenad and Petrić, Jasna and Filipović, Marko",
year = "2007",
abstract = "The role of lower‐order urban centres in national and regional development constitutes an important subject of debate. In the field of contemporary urban research, small and medium‐sized towns are gaining importance because they build a very important link between big cities and rural areas. Obviously, “small” and “medium” generally refers to the size in terms of population of the towns. However, these are highly subjective qualifications, whose concrete meaning depends on the considered national urban system. As the official statistics in Serbia does not recognise categorisation of urban settlements on small, medium or big, for the purposes of analyses presented in this Monograph we have adopted the conditional categorisation of urban settlements in Central Serbia, which corresponds to categorisation applied in some previous research on small and medium‐sized towns of the post‐World War II Serbia. Attention was paid to development of these settlements in Central Serbia in the two periods: 1948‐1981 and 1981‐2002, since they are marked by different socio‐economic aspects of urbanisation. A body of work in this Monograph treats demographic and economic changes which featured Serbian urban settlements of different categories especially in the period 1948‐1981 (primary urbanisation process) when rural‐to‐urban migrations were mostly expressed, and when small towns in particular were the first “dam” for rural emigrants flows. Although it may seam at first glance that the urban settlements’ distribution in the settlement network of Central Serbia has been satisfactory, the discord between the number of inhabitants in Belgrade as the capital city and other urban settlements points to the issue of sharp division between the centre and the periphery. Small and medium‐sized towns of Central Serbia marked a noticeable population growth in the period of the primary urbanisation, but most of all they had the fastest rate of GNP growth and very high employment rates. However, starting with the economic downturn of the country in the 1990s, when a significant concentration of political and economic power happened in Belgrade, many of these settlements have gone through stagnation. It has to be stressed that as in other countries, a number of smaller and particularly medium‐sized towns of Central Serbia have strong roots in the secondary sector which has particularly suffered because of present global and national economy conditions. In such context the question is why do we take an interest in small and medium‐sized towns now or why at all? Firstly, the renewed interest in these urban settlements in Serbia as in other European countries is that, despite being neglected in the past, they are perceived to play quite different roles along the continuum from centre to periphery. With this in view, it is important to clarify the diversity of roles that small and medium sized towns have in relation to their surroundings. Many of them may seem insignificant at a European or even at a national level, whereas at regional and local level they may be of reasonably large importance, like centres in more remote, rural, mountain and peripheral areas. The role might differ regarding the geographical context of a town (being linked with a big city, or part of a functional cluster of small and medium‐sized towns, or the only urban settlement in a region); the economic performance; the function and size of the town; or other aspects, e.g. accessibility or specialisation in certain sector of activity. The knowledge of the role of small and medium‐sized towns needs to be explored to a much larger degree in order to formulate adequate policy recommendations – both at EU and national level, which on one hand can support existing positive development and on the other hand can assist small and medium‐sized towns in decline in diverting present negative development trends. Small and medium‐sized towns of Central Serbia have a potential to become sustainable, but only if urban networks are developed between these smaller urbanities and also among them and bigger cities. In other words, a key factor for the future existence and development of these towns is cooperation and
new and more efficient types of governance and urban policy. This work aims to offer an incentive for further research on small and medium-sized towns in our country by provision of fundamental theses requiring more thorough investigation in particular contexts.",
publisher = "Belgrade : Institute of Architecture and Urban & Spatial Planning of Serbia",
title = "Small and Medium Towns of Central Serbia - Standpoints and Assumptions on Development Perspectives",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raumplan_407"
}
Spasić, N., Petrić, J.,& Filipović, M.. (2007). Small and Medium Towns of Central Serbia - Standpoints and Assumptions on Development Perspectives. 
Belgrade : Institute of Architecture and Urban & Spatial Planning of Serbia..
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raumplan_407
Spasić N, Petrić J, Filipović M. Small and Medium Towns of Central Serbia - Standpoints and Assumptions on Development Perspectives. 2007;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raumplan_407 .
Spasić, Nenad, Petrić, Jasna, Filipović, Marko, "Small and Medium Towns of Central Serbia - Standpoints and Assumptions on Development Perspectives" (2007),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raumplan_407 .

Demographic changes in towns of Central Serbia: Comparative analysis

Filipović, Marko; Đurđević, Jasmina

(Institute of Architecture and Urban and Spatial Planning of Serbia, 2007)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Filipović, Marko
AU  - Đurđević, Jasmina
PY  - 2007
UR  - https://raumplan.iaus.ac.rs/handle/123456789/118
AB  - Due to intensive urbanization, Central Serbia's urban population reached almost 60% in the total population. Despite the fact that the urban residents share in Serbia is still bellow the level of urbanization in developed countries, in which the percentage of urban residents exudes 70% (in majority of cases even more than 80%), it is an impression that demographic "resources" of rural areas have bean rather exhausted and that all demographic revitalization potential of Central Serbia is concentrated in towns. This paper treats the demographic changes which encompassed the towns of Central Serbia since 1981 census onwards, with special emphasis on the population migrations as well as on the natural growth, i.e. age - gender structure formation featuring the towns of Central Serbia. The changes will be analyzed trough a comparative analysis at the level of small, medium sized towns and big cities, while Belgrade will be represent as a special category.
AB  - Pod uticajem intenzivne urbanizacije, broj stanovnika Centralne Srbije koji žive u gradovima dostigao je skoro 60% ukupnog broja. I pored toga što je udeo gradskog stanovništva još uvek prilično ispod nivoa razvijenijih zemalja, gde procenat urbanog stanovništva prelazi 70% (u velikom broju slučajeva i preko 80%), stiče se utisak da su demografski "resursi" seoskih područja prilično istrošeni i da je sav potencijal demografske revitalizacije Centralne Srbije koncentrisan u gradovima. U ovom radu biće reči o demografskim promenama koje su zahvatile gradove Centralne Srbije od popisa 1981. godine pa do danas, sa posebnim osvrtom na migracije stanovništva, kao i na prirodno kretanje, odnosno na formiranje starosno - polne strukture gradova. Promene će biti posmatrane kroz komparativnu analizu na nivou malih srednjih i velikih gradova, dok će Beograd biti predstavljen kao posebna kategorija.
PB  - Institute of Architecture and Urban and Spatial Planning of Serbia
T2  - Arhitektura i urbanizam
T1  - Demographic changes in towns of Central Serbia: Comparative analysis
T1  - Demografske promene u gradovima centralne Srbije - komparativna analiza
IS  - 20-21
SP  - 101
EP  - 111
UR  - Konv_12
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Filipović, Marko and Đurđević, Jasmina",
year = "2007",
abstract = "Due to intensive urbanization, Central Serbia's urban population reached almost 60% in the total population. Despite the fact that the urban residents share in Serbia is still bellow the level of urbanization in developed countries, in which the percentage of urban residents exudes 70% (in majority of cases even more than 80%), it is an impression that demographic "resources" of rural areas have bean rather exhausted and that all demographic revitalization potential of Central Serbia is concentrated in towns. This paper treats the demographic changes which encompassed the towns of Central Serbia since 1981 census onwards, with special emphasis on the population migrations as well as on the natural growth, i.e. age - gender structure formation featuring the towns of Central Serbia. The changes will be analyzed trough a comparative analysis at the level of small, medium sized towns and big cities, while Belgrade will be represent as a special category., Pod uticajem intenzivne urbanizacije, broj stanovnika Centralne Srbije koji žive u gradovima dostigao je skoro 60% ukupnog broja. I pored toga što je udeo gradskog stanovništva još uvek prilično ispod nivoa razvijenijih zemalja, gde procenat urbanog stanovništva prelazi 70% (u velikom broju slučajeva i preko 80%), stiče se utisak da su demografski "resursi" seoskih područja prilično istrošeni i da je sav potencijal demografske revitalizacije Centralne Srbije koncentrisan u gradovima. U ovom radu biće reči o demografskim promenama koje su zahvatile gradove Centralne Srbije od popisa 1981. godine pa do danas, sa posebnim osvrtom na migracije stanovništva, kao i na prirodno kretanje, odnosno na formiranje starosno - polne strukture gradova. Promene će biti posmatrane kroz komparativnu analizu na nivou malih srednjih i velikih gradova, dok će Beograd biti predstavljen kao posebna kategorija.",
publisher = "Institute of Architecture and Urban and Spatial Planning of Serbia",
journal = "Arhitektura i urbanizam",
title = "Demographic changes in towns of Central Serbia: Comparative analysis, Demografske promene u gradovima centralne Srbije - komparativna analiza",
number = "20-21",
pages = "101-111",
url = "Konv_12"
}
Filipović, M.,& Đurđević, J.. (2007). Demographic changes in towns of Central Serbia: Comparative analysis. in Arhitektura i urbanizam
Institute of Architecture and Urban and Spatial Planning of Serbia.(20-21), 101-111.
Konv_12
Filipović M, Đurđević J. Demographic changes in towns of Central Serbia: Comparative analysis. in Arhitektura i urbanizam. 2007;(20-21):101-111.
Konv_12 .
Filipović, Marko, Đurđević, Jasmina, "Demographic changes in towns of Central Serbia: Comparative analysis" in Arhitektura i urbanizam, no. 20-21 (2007):101-111,
Konv_12 .