4.7 Article

Does the environment matter? Depopulation in the Sudetes (case study of the Klodzko region, SW Poland)

Journal

APPLIED GEOGRAPHY
Volume 135, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.apgeog.2021.102535

Keywords

Out-migration; Peripheral rural areas; Environmental impact; Regression-based spatial modeling; Central Europe

Categories

Funding

  1. Polish Committee of Scientific Research [NN 306 384 539]

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This study evaluated the influence of environmental factors on depopulation in the Klodzko region in the Sudetes by conducting comparative analysis and spatial modeling. Natural features were confirmed to play a key role in strengthening out-migration and land abandonment. However, separating the impact of environmental and socio-economic factors proved to be difficult to quantify, and the environment may act as a local modifier of external non-environmental processes when a change exceeds the equilibrium threshold.
Out-migration and the resulting depopulation are currently one of the distinct problems worldwide. The aim of this research was to evaluate the influence of environmental factors on depopulation. We considered natural agents with long-term, constant, or gradually changing impacts and discussed the possibility of decoupling the role of the environment from overlapping non-environmental factors. The research was conducted for the Klodzko region in the Sudetes, a representative example of a depopulating peripheral mountain and border area in Central Europe. The methods included: comparative analysis from census data from the mid-19th century until the present, and regression-based spatial modeling. The key role of natural features was confirmed to strengthen the out-migration and land abandonment. However, separating the impact of environmental and socio-economic factors turned out to be hard to quantify. The environment can be perceived as a passive element of depopulation unless there is a change which activates the reaction chain and the equilibrium threshold is exceeded. The change might be within the environmental system itself, or it might be related to external drivers such as socioeconomic, political, institutional, etc. transformations. In the latter case, the environment would react as a local modifier of external non-environmental processes.

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