Institute of Sociology
of the Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology
of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Gunko M., Eremenko Yu., Batunova E. (2020) Planning Strategies in the Context of Urban Shrinkage in Russia: Evidence from Small and Medium-sized Cities. Mir Rossii, vol. 29, no 3, pp. 121–141 (in Russian).



Gunko M., Eremenko Yu., Batunova E. (2020) Planning Strategies in the Context of Urban Shrinkage in Russia: Evidence from Small and Medium-sized Cities. Mir Rossii, vol. 29, no 3, pp. 121–141 (in Russian).
ISSN 1811-038X
DOI 10.17323/1811-038X-2020-29-3-121-141

Posted on site: 06.10.20

Текст статьи на сайте журнала URL: https://mirros.hse.ru/article/view/10995 (дата обращения 06.10.2020)


Abstract

In the last decades of the 20th century, urban shrinkage has become an evident process in many countries with significant, long-term, and stable depopulation as its main feature. In the post-Soviet Russia, cities with a population less than 100 thousand people (small and medium-sized cities – SMSC) are the most depopulating ones, in 182 of them population loss since 1989 accounts for 25% and over. The new demographic reality, which alters the cityscape and infrastructure requirements, calls for a rethinking of planning in such cities. The current research is aimed at the analysis of projected spatial development in SMSC under conditions of significant depopulation, as well as how it may be shaped by the main actors and their coalitions. The empirical data were obtained through the analysis of general plans and semi-structured interviews with the representatives of administrations, business, and the local communities in Vorkuta (Komi Republic) and Apatity (Murmansk oblast). The results of general plans’ analysis indicate that urban shrinkage with rare exceptions is ignored as a current and future reality. The key topic of urban policy and planning predominantly lies in the creation of conditions for maximizing profits from the use of real estate and land. Vorkuta turned out to be the only city among those analyzed with planning for shrinkage. There are several actors interested in such planning agenda with the formation of a clear coalition aimed at the optimization of the cityscape and costs reduction. Apatity, on the other hand, is a typical Russian case of planning for growth under conditions of shrinkage due to the lack of interested actors, as well as a deep misunderstanding of shrinkage’s complexity and consequences.