Coastal towns as 'left-behind places': economy, environment and planning

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Abstract

Many coastal towns in England face a unique set of overlapping challenges: a longstanding socio-economic stagnation and environmental threats coming from the physical location. This paper examines coastal communities in the context of the left-behind debate. The consequences of de-industrialisation and failures in public policies recall other left-behind geographies. We look at a selection of case studies, apparently dealing with the decline of traditional coastal economic activities, but really affected by a decoupling of their socio-economic profile from their coastal specificity. More work is needed to nurture the existing coastal imaginaries, requiring regional coordination and a place-based approach to regeneration.

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Fiorentino, S., Sielker, F., & Tomaney, J. (2024). Coastal towns as “left-behind places”: economy, environment and planning. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 17(1), 103–116. https://doi.org/10.1093/cjres/rsad045

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