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Espoon keskiaikaisen kivikirkon puurakenteiden iänmääritys, dendrokronologiset ajoitukset FIU1101-12
Periphery syndrome - a reinterpretation of regional development theory in a resource periphery
A study is made of industrialization and the transition in economic structure as it has affected a remote peripheral region of Finland with a predominantly resource‑based economy over the last twenty years or so. The empirical resultsare used to interpret and develop theory of regional development adequate for describing the transition of this peripheral region from an area dominated by primary‑sector production to one characterized by industry and the service sector. The resource‑based peripheral region concerned is the province of Northern Karelia.
A region‑level core‑periphery system is outlined in which the organization of the economy, the division of labour, performance potential and environmental relations are examined by regional and spatial analysis and resource analysis. A model is developed for evaluating the performance potential of an economy and proposing alternative paths of development.
Development in a periphery is regulated by external impulses (demand, regional policy, etc.) together with the distinctive features imposed on the economy by its past history. This development can be explained by reference to rationalization in resource processing sectors, profitability difficulties, poor growth propensity and special characteristics of the division of labour and the adoption of new technology. The combined effect of these factors, termed here the periphery syndrome, leads to differences in affluence and in general to regional differentiation in the economy. The syndrome is dynamic in nature. The principal problems following the economic transition are shifting away from rationalization in agriculture and towards the structure of industry itself. The resource periphery is becoming an industrial periphery.
The conclusions comprise a set of eight conceptual systems of factors which should be taken into account when studying economic transition and industrialization in peripheral regions. These concern development with respect to population, rationalization, regional policy, the spatial division of labour, spatial cost structures, demand, entrepreneurship and resource and environment factors and the influence of these on regional development in the periphery in question.
The differences in development between the sectors of industry are of significance for regional development as a whole, and allowance should be made for these in the theory. Where theories of development in resource peripheries tend to represent outcomes of a number of external and internal factors and ones applying to individual sectors, the explanatory model evolved here comprises theoretical concepts of a number of different types
Accessibility in the provinces of Finland
Relative, mean and integral accessibility in the existing provinces of Finland and in the proposed new provinces was studied applying graph theory, through evaluating the shapes of the provinces by reference to polygonal graphs, and, in a more detailed analysis, through using flow graphs to represent the accessibility between locations. The sensitivity of the accessibility structure was tested by means of two simulation experiments.
The poorest accessibility levels existed in the more northerly provinces, although some provinces weak in this respect could also be found in Southern and Central Finland, especially when accessibility was studied in relation to the size of the province. This correlates with a certain backwardness in the development of the administrative regions in relation to population development. The proposed province revisions have not corrected this situation entirely. The locations of the provincial capitals are close to the (pareto‑)optimum in general, the non‑optimal cases being ones in which the most significant centres of population growth have been located elsewhere than in the provincial capital or its immediate surroundings. Integral accessibility as a measure of optimal location is not sensitive to changes in spatial structure, and extremely large movements of population would be required to cause any substantial alteration in the location of the optimal centre