Resident or present? Population census data tell you more about suburbanization

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Abstract

The present study analyzes population redistribution across metropolitan regions considering together changes over time in the spatial distribution of resident and present population from census data. Considering population dynamics in Athens, Greece, between 1991 and 2011, the results of this study evidenced how the ratio of present to resident population increases more rapidly in urban than rural areas along the last twenty years. By revealing different expansion processes at the regional and local scales, the present-to-resident ratio of usual population was correlated to selected variables (population density and growth, distance from the inner city and settlement dispersion) with the aim at delineating apparent and latent relationships with the local socioeconomic context. Statistical analysis indicates that the present-to-resident population ratio is reflective of the intense suburbanization observed until the early 1990s in Athens, determining population redistribution and settlement dispersion over larger areas.

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Rontos, K., Colantoni, A., Salvati, L., Mosconi, E. M., & Morera, A. G. (2020). Resident or present? Population census data tell you more about suburbanization. Land, 9(10), 1–13. https://doi.org/10.3390/land9100383

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